At the 50-year mark, the Endangered Species Act may be in peril
Fifty years after the U.S. Endangered Species Act took effect, officials say 99% of the animals and plants it protects have survived. But opposition has grown from industry and landowners who say it hampers economic growth and property rights. Some lawmakers are trying to weaken the law.
-AP News 2023
If our responsibility can be destroyed, does that preclude it? — chiknsld
Another important question: Is it essential that humanity have compassion and empathy towards animals on earth? — chiknsld
Do you believe in the sanctity of life and in our responsibility to protect animals on earth? — chiknsld
What is the responsibility of humanity at the point of destruction? — chiknsld
Even just as a duty to "preserve the planet for future generations", I find it difficult to give future generations moral standing in a convincing way. — Echarmion
I don't call it 'sanctity'. While I have no brief with spirituality, I don't think it's useful to couch ecological survival in religious terminology. — Vera Mont
Rather, I would prefer humans to reason their way to understanding the interdependence of life on Earth. Of course, I would also like them to have more empathy. — Vera Mont
Also, I want to pick a nit with "our responsibility to protect animals": Which "we" is protecting which animals from what? The same "we" that's asked to protect is the only existential danger to other species. So, all we have to do, in theory, is stop killing them. If the majority of humans is unwilling to contemplate that option, there is no hope. — Vera Mont
Moot point. We'll be running around, looking for something to hide under, screaming, as helpless as any duck or rabbit. The responsibility should have kicked in a long time ago - or rather, it should never have been abandoned. — Vera Mont
…completely dependent on a complex environment.
If we do not, then we--as a species--might well be finished because the fucked-over environment will no longer support us, or much else — BC
IF we finish ourselves off in nuclear annihilation or run-away globe heating, we're dead meat--another bunch of rotting carcasses on the dying planet, forever guilty of suicidal ecocide. — BC
Ethically speaking (your preferences)? — chiknsld
But things have changed through history, albeit slowly and in a piecemeal fashion, and laws to protect animals against abuses were brought into effect.
more enlightened legal codes do place some official limits on how their citizen treat other animals. Those laws were no easy matter to legislate! — Vera Mont
I agree with the act of considering animals as part of our society and owning the same rights and respect. I wish most people would be tolerant of the environment and species. — javi2541997
Each species has its own characteristics. I am aware that it is a complex matter, but this does not prevent the fact that we should be more respectful towards the animal kingdom. Yes, you are right that it is not the same to be "ethical" with a dog that with a crocodile. — javi2541997
You can unilaterally respect someone or something, but to have a right you need to at least theoretically be able to exercise it. — Echarmion
Are animal rights really animal rights if no actual (non-human) animals are involved on either side of the process? — Echarmion
I disagree. For example: a handicapped person is not capable of exercising a lot of rights by himself. Yet, the state concedes benefits to help them out to exercise them through a legal carer. — javi2541997
What do you consider as "actual" animals then? — javi2541997
It doesn't follow that it actually makes sense to ascribe rights to someone who isn't even theoretically capable of exercising them. It's the carer who really has the rights and obligations. — Echarmion
Non-human animals, as I said. Not sure where you're going with this. — Echarmion
You are misunderstanding the concepts. The handicapped person is the one who holds the rights and the carer the one who exercises them. This is the main cause of naming a carer in court, to help others out. This civil rights are taught when you study law. — javi2541997
I am lost here. I do not understand what you refer to. — javi2541997
I'm not disagreeing with what is the case de lege lata. I'm just questioning whether that serves as an argument in moral philosophy. There might be lots of reasons why the rules are as they are that are unrelated to a philosophical argument. — Echarmion
How do you mean they're not involved? And what process has two sides? Within each group of social animals, there is an accepted code of behaviour, just as there is in human groups. Wolf law doesn't extend to crow society; meerkat rules don't include zebra herds; human law presides over human behaviour.Are animal rights really animal rights if no actual (non-human) animals are involved on either side of the process? — Echarmion
How do you mean they're not involved? And what process has two sides? — Vera Mont
human law presides over human behaviour. — Vera Mont
They must come under human law: so long as they are enslaved, their masters must answer for their actions - and their masters are responsible for their welfare. — Vera Mont
Not ethically speaking; just my personal preference. Ethics are societal and cultural; most human moral codes do not afford rights to other species, though the modern, more enlightened legal codes do place some official limits on how their citizen treat other animals. Those laws were no easy matter to legislate!
"But things have changed through history, albeit slowly and in a piecemeal fashion, and laws to protect animals against abuses were brought into effect."
But then, laws made by man can be broken and revoked by man.
Rather, I would prefer humans to reason their way to understanding the interdependence of life on Earth. Of course, I would also like them to have more empathy. — Vera Mont
We have destroyed their habitat, burned down their forests, polluted their oceans, etc.
So, in this context, it is necessary to rule on the protection of animals. — javi2541997
So, in this context, it is necessary to rule on the protection of animals. It is not only an "ought" but a must. For example: In Spain, animals are already considered "sentient beings" and if someone treats them badly, he/she can suffer a lot of consequences in the justice.
I agree with the act of considering animals as part of our society and owning the same rights and respect. I wish most people would be tolerant of the environment and species. — javi2541997
They can't talk. So they cannot contribute to any negotiation about the accepted code of behaviour. — Echarmion
Of human laws, yes. Of the laws of their own species, they're subjects.Yes, but that means that animals could only ever be the objects of that law, not the subjects. — Echarmion
But that is true for all animals. So long as they come under human law, they can only ever be treated as "slaves" - that is objects — Echarmion
That is the situation. Lions make laws to govern lion behaviour. They owe nothing to zebras... except their own survival: if they hunt down all the zebras, they will starve, but lions can't know this. Humans make laws to govern human behaviour. We have no obligation to other species, except whatever obligation we impose on ourselves, and we are capable of knowing that our lives depend on them.You can have an obligation to treat animals well, but that obligation is fundamentally owed to other humans, not to the animal. — Echarmion
We have no obligation to other species, except whatever obligation we impose on ourselves, and we are capable of knowing that our lives depend on them. — Vera Mont
Therefore, your empathy is entirely reason-based and transactional. If there were no interdependence of life then you would see no basis for the sanctity of life. — chiknsld
If we take away all your reasoning then you no longer have any justification for empathy and compassion. — chiknsld
You do not believe in a superimposed duty to protect animals but rather a self-reasoned duty. — chiknsld
I disagree that morality is completely dependent upon reason, — chiknsld
Animals have no moral standing in a human moral philosophy. — Echarmion
I didn't say it was. I said ethics are societal and cultural. Societies are made of people who all have reason, emotion, instincts and biological drives. Their laws are determined by their collective world-view, and that has grown out of their cultural development over time. It's dynamic, interactive, reactive, malleable. — Vera Mont
Life has no objective value, no inherent holiness: it's messy, often humiliating, often painful, and sometimes wonderful. — Vera Mont
I would prefer humanity at large to understand its dependence on nature, to disarm all its soldiers, to redistribute the world's resources more equitably, to stop burning oil, and also to show more empathy. — Vera Mont
The aim of reason is to use information as a tool (completing a goal). — chiknsld
I would argue that life has objective value otherwise it would not exist. In other words, life exists because it has an objective value which is able to necessitate itself within the universe. — chiknsld
If you are not using the universe as the measuring stick then your entire justification for the validity of human reason falls flat — chiknsld
This is perfectly circular. — Vera Mont
If we assume that objective value exists, then indeed, there would be nothing inherently wrong with saying that life has objective value and that this value necessitates itself within the universe.
In this context, you are making a claim about the intrinsic worth or value of life, and you are asserting that this value is not merely a result of subjective opinions but has a more fundamental and objective nature. By stating that life "necessitates itself within the universe," you are suggesting that the objective value of life is not dependent on external factors but is an inherent aspect of existence. — chatGPT
What's that to do with ethics? — Vera Mont
...you still provide a rudimentary, and somewhat moral ethics by focusing on reason...
...I disagree that morality is completely dependent upon reason.
I didn't say it was. I said ethics are... — Vera Mont
This is perfectly circular. — Vera Mont
If you are not using the universe as the measuring stick then your entire justification for the validity of human reason falls flat...
— chiknsld
How the hell do you use the universe as a measuring-stick, for what....? I don't recall attempting to 'justify' human reason and I don't see why that would... In fact, I have no idea what you mean by any of that. — Vera Mont
If you are not using the universe as the measuring stick... — chiknsld
The use of the universe as a measuring stick stems from the idea that objective value, if it exists, is something that transcends individual perspectives and is applicable on a universal scale. When discussing concepts like reason and objective value, philosophers often seek to establish criteria or principles that can be applied consistently and universally, independent of individual beliefs or biases.
Using the universe as a measuring stick means grounding our understanding of reason and objective value in something that is beyond the subjectivity of individual experiences or limited contexts. The universe, being vast and encompassing all that exists, is seen as a reference point that allows us to consider concepts in a broader, more objective framework.
For example, if we were to discuss the objective value of life, we might consider whether this value persists and is applicable across various life forms and environments in the universe. By doing so, we attempt to move beyond personal opinions and consider objective aspects that might apply universally.
By using the universe as a measuring stick, philosophers aim to approach questions about reason and objective value in a more rigorous and consistent manner, avoiding the pitfalls of purely subjective reasoning. It allows for a broader scope of analysis and encourages a more objective examination of these complex philosophical concepts.
Of course, using the universe as a measuring stick is not without its challenges and complexities, and different philosophical schools might approach this idea differently. However, it reflects an attempt to grapple with questions of objectivity and universality when discussing fundamental concepts that transcend individual experiences. — chatGPT
The operative phrase in all that gibberish is "if you assume"
If you assume something absurd, all the universe will thereby be rendered absurd. If you assume something ordered and logical, all the laws of physics will follow suit. If you assume that a robot can mimic your convoluted thinking, the robot will oblige.
Assume me out of the circle game. — Vera Mont
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