If it is the killing itself, then you vegans have that problem of killing life. Plants are life. — Harry Hindu
Wrong. Many of us seek pain and discomfort, so pain is not necessarily bad. Making mistakes is how we learn and develop. Enduring hardships can make us better and stronger people. Then there are those that say that being born is wrong and being alive is suffering and ending your life would be good (just look at some of the other threads on this forum). This is what I mean by it being subjective. — Harry Hindu
Your survival depends upon existing within a community that to a large degree fuels/feeds itself on the use of animals. — Inyenzi
But veganism IS cult-like. It is one thing to talk about the pragmatic health or environmental benefits. It is another to want to take over the world with an absolutist moral prescription. — apokrisis
Apo is clearly trolling you. He likes to disguise the vapidity and trollishness of his replies in an endless word-jumble that he'll inevitably say you don't understand anyways. — Akanthinos
...so I have accepted ethical consistency as a constraint and challenged the monotonic absolutism of empathy/compassion as "pillars" - the solitary foundations of any moral position. — apokrisis
However I was addressing his initial argument that subjectively we feel compassion and empathy for sentient creatures, so as soon as we recognise sentience in a creature, ethical consistency demands a compassionate and empathetic response. — apokrisis
I applaud your dogmatism. — jastopher
The grounds of the exception are imposed diminished well-being, which I already explained, but apparently you didn't read.How can an exception be justified if it has no grounds? — apokrisis
In the same way you claim that Veganism is too much effort for you, I could claim that a slave owner could use the same justification. Imagine talking to a slave owner, telling him to stop owning slaves, and his response was "It is too much effort to stop owning slaves. And I really like the pleasure of owning them". This reasoning is flawed and doesn't even work when you use it against yourself.Sure fine. But your dependence on subjectivity and absolutism leaves you open to the counter-position that veganism is all too much effort for me, I really like the taste of meat. And I only feel my own pain or suffering. I don't actually experience that of any animal involved. So the primary duty of care remains the servicing of my own selfish wishes here. — apokrisis
You keep going back to my subjectivity and absolutism. Where is my subjectivity and absolutism being deployed? As I said before, my views/perception are completely irrelevant here. We can use your beliefs specifically, and it would still lead to Veganism, unless you're willing to bite the bullet on some absurd positions. I'd like you to tell me why you believe that eating animals is justified, without pointing to what you think my view is. Especially when you keep getting my view wrong.I'm not saying I would take that unbalanced view personally. I'm saying it is equally valid given your subjectivity and absolutism. — apokrisis
You eat meat because you don't have a strong enough reason not to? How about causing needless suffering and pain to animals? Or global warming concerns? Or the fact that plant based foods are actually healthier than animal products? It seems that you just haven't done the research, or are being willfully ignorant on this topic, if you haven't found a good reason to stop eating animals.I eat meat because I don't have a strong enough reason not to. I believe that lot of ethical choices do frankly fall into a gray area where there is nothing terribly significant at stake. I see ethics as a pragmatic work in progress and there are many cultural habits to be working on. — apokrisis
Morality based on social norms is flawed, as we have had terrible norms in the past, such as slavery. So I am not sure of your point here?If that were customary in my society, then I'm sure I'd be quite use to the practice and wouldn't have a strong objection. — apokrisis
Eating autistics is similar to eating animals. There is no NEED for the consumption of either of these living beings. Plant based foods, which cause no pain or suffering and are better for the environment, are a much better option than animals or autistics. That's the point.Does eating autistics achieve some reasonable goal? What are the actual pros and cons. Any ideas? — apokrisis
You are confusing two points here. You stated that a lion doesn't understand the concept of right and wrong, AKA good or bad. But we, as humans, DO understand that concept. So a lion perceives pain as something it wants to avoid. We label that same perception as BAD/WRONG if we inflict that pain onto another. A lion does not understand that to the same extent we do.Then I don't understand the point of this thread. Is it "wrong"/"bad" to eat animals? — Harry Hindu
What does it even mean to say that "humans have a higher capacity for moral value"? Humans have the capacity to put themselves in others' shoes. We think that other people and animals think and want the same things we do. They don't. So all you are doing is applying your own rules to others. As I told you before, morals and ethics are subjective and are not applicable across the board in every situation for every organism. — Harry Hindu
Why would self-defence ever be morally justified? What is the general idea you were after there? How is eating meat not a legitimate form of "self-defence" against the perils of being a starving meat-eater? — apokrisis
What are the distinct set of circumstances? A slave owner could point to a set of circumstances, as well as have others that can relate and indentify with the slave owner’s position.No, I don't think so, because I can point to a distinct set of circumstances, and others can relate to and identify with my position. — Sapientia
It depends on what your moral foundation is based upon. And if you have no foundation you can point to, then you are basically incapable of discerning right from wrong. Because I base my morality on improving the well-being of sentient beings. If it was possible for me to save a baby from a burning house, without putting myself at great risk, it would be wrong for me to not save the baby, because I would be allowing the baby to have a diminished well-being. If my goal is to improve/consider the well-being of sentient beings, saving the baby would be in my framework.I can know that there's something wrong about standing by doing nothing whilst a house begins to burn with a baby trapped inside, even if I wasn't able to put my finger on it. — Sapientia
If someone thinks that it's okay to eat chicken, and not to eat human, but perhaps can't quite put their finger on why exactly that is, then I think that it will be intuitively compelling for such a person to conclude, after giving this thought experiment some consideration, that it's okay to eat humans under the right circumstances, namely that they're practically a chicken in all but name. — Sapientia
What makes you think that you can reasonably break up my conditions and assess each of them in isolation? That's not how I answered the question. If all of those conditions were met, then I would have no qualms. — Sapientia
I'm only saying that I am OK with eating pigs but not humans, and that the difference in intelligence of these species seems to be the trait that best explains why I feel the way I do. — Michael
Well, if there were a human who had the same level of intelligence as a chicken, who looked and acted just like a chicken, had the same kind of flesh as a chicken, and was to all intents and purposes treated just like a chicken on a farm, then I would have no qualms with eating a human burger made from this human. — Sapientia
And in hindsight, perhaps I shouldn't have humoured you when you told me to name the trait, as if there were only a single reason why it's considered acceptable to farm chickens, but not humans. If not intellectual capacity, at least in the case of those humans who it is claimed have an intellectual capacity of an equivalent level to that of a chicken, then it must be some other reason, or some additional reason or reasons. — Sapientia
Are you really making an equivalence between the severely autistic or mentally disabled and chickens? — Sapientia
Advanced intellectual capacity. — Sapientia
Because ethics isn't the be-all and end-all. — Sapientia
To pretend that all of human societies are inherently immoral because the eat meat, is wrong and I think it is a form of intellectual elitism. — Cavacava
If you think reason & logic are the sole constituents of moral behavior then I think you have an impoverished view of morality which is evident in the elitist position you are trying to maintain. — Cavacava
that morality should be based on something other than a capacity for pain. — MetaphysicsNow
but it's fine to farm chickens, and it's not fine to farm humans. — Sapientia
you kinda need to establish that eating meat is intrinsically wrong — Buxtebuddha
But if someone challenges the idea that capactity for pain is morally relevant, how do you respond? — MetaphysicsNow
Whereas harm is avoided if I don't own you as a slave. — Michael
A system of morality does not require being based on whether the objects of moral concern feel pain or not. — MetaphysicsNow
I too value human life over animal life, however unlike your position I don't believe animals have rights simpliciter, rather their rights are given to them by us. — Cavacava
The aesthetic pleasure of eating a 2 inch well cooked and spiced steak, goes beyon logic and reason. Human activities of this sort and many other sorts can't be circumscribed by logic and reason. — Cavacava
You don't recognise a will to live, you project it. And they have no rights, except those assigned to them. — Sapientia
Funnily enough, I'm not as empathic or compassionate towards a chicken kept in a small cage as I am towards a human kept in a small cage. — Sapientia