Do animals have rights if they don't have responsibilities? — inquisitive
Cruelty to farm animals might be way down that moral list, for example — inquisitive
Hold on, those aren't my quotes, they're from apokrisis.
Humans have the capacity to create things such as rights, other animals don't, and we have granted those rights to ourselves, and not other animals. — Bitter Crank
That makes sense in a way, but it also sounds selfish. Imagine saying: "western society has created rights and we have granted those to ourselves, and not other civilizations (i.e. natives on colonized continents)."
I'm all in favor of expanded national parks and humane farming, but the two are separate issues — Bitter Crank
Yes, my phrasing was bad there. I was merely trying to show that there is clearly still a lack of caring for nature.
I don't think that savage mistreatment of large animals is routine, but the way chickens are raised amounts to something pretty close to abuse. — Bitter Crank
You'd be surprised what you can find with some Googling. From a certain scale onwards (and depending on the country and its laws/policing) most farm animals receive bad treatment.
I am not ready to give animals rights, but I am ready to accept that we have responsibilities to the ecology we live in — Bitter Crank
I have trouble with the fact that you don't see animals as beings that deserve rights (maybe limited compared to ours). However, your admission of responsibility seems 'good enough' to work with as a strategy. I think that's what a lot of the argument comes down to - a complete shift is probably impossible, but we need to move in this direction I believe.
My guess is that workers who mistreat animals are themselves being mistreated by the owners. — Bitter Crank
That may be true and it's part of the reason I specifically excluded judgment of those people. It's a result of the need for very high productivity.
But unless you can make some argument about morality being an objective fact of nature, or some divinely-ordained reality, then moral relativism applies. Our discussion of how things go for animals is going to be framed within that particular understanding of rights and responsibilities. — apokrisis
I don't believe complete moral relativism is a useful concept. Perhaps this is where our divide lies. I think there has to be a certain amount of moral realism in the world. Would you not agree that there are things that are objectively bad? I don't like to use extremes, but consider rape or genital mutilation.
It seems to me that one can reasonably argue that any moral framework which justifies these acts is not a moral framework that should be applied. You can relativize issues like veganism, because the circumstance that animals eat one another is a natural truth. I'm not an expert on the subject, but it seems that a sudden change of diet to exclude all animal products can be harmful to ones health because certain nutrients aren't present in a purely plant-based diet.
Likewise, farming practices are changing at a gallop where I live - New Zealand. Cow sheds are now being built with cow back-scratchers. The cows choose when to come in and get milked by robotic milkers. Stuff that would be unthinkable ten years ago is becoming the norm, such is the pressure to be "ethical" when selling to an increasingly informed middleclass public. — apokrisis
That's a great development, I hope we can continue to move in that direction. Maybe purely "ethical" pressure isn't enough though? It seems to me that government regulations are still too lax here.
Infants grow into adults. And they can't become well-formed moral beings unless they are treated as beings which can learn to grow into their responsibilities within a moral order. — apokrisis
So the reason for giving infants rights is purely of a pragmatic nature?