Everything we do, and everything that happens in the natural world, including the affairs of gazelles, eventually affects everything else. — Bitter Crank
There is a distinction between redheads and blondes. It doesn't imply we have a different ethical responsibility to each. Simply pointing to a difference in property isn't an argument for difference in ethical treatment. — Isaac
Well, if you're asking me directly, my answer is because it would be ridiculous. Same answer as I'd give to most such ethical extremes. I think it's absurd to pluck an ethical principle out of our intertwined biological and cultural milieu and then, for no reason at all, follow it through to whatever ends, even the destruction of the very wellspring which birthed it. What would be the point? — Isaac
Why not. Why are we not morally responsible for other animals? — Isaac
I appreciate the effort it took to write that down, and find little to disagree with. But I’m just asking why you yourself must be governed. — NOS4A2
Why are the gazelles on the African savannah not in our protection — Isaac
Why must you be governed? — NOS4A2
So why do we protect other humans from natural (non-human) causes of harm, but not other animals? — Isaac
I mean this is patently false. Again the reason why I provided the example I did. If other humans were suffering as a result of frequent animal attacks, or frequent earthquakes, or volcanoes... We don't wash our hands of the humanitarian issues because they were not caused by other humans. We have barriers in place to prevent such tragedies because we care about the humans who would otherwise suffer. So if our ethical concerns extend without caveat, to other animals, then why do we not similarly protect prey from the suffering at the hands of their predators. A lion is no less a natural occurrence than an earthquake. We evacuate people from the vicinity of the latter, ought we evacuate prey from the vicinity of the former? — Isaac
Since I am not a moral realist, I am not making a moral argument. I am critiquing the is part of your postion. — Bylaw
A claim is not defended by pointing out that an alternative claim is wrong unless the two claims are mutually exclusive. — Isaac
Why? This is Graeme M's thread about veganism and you posted a claim on it. Why are we now discussing a caricature of a theory of mine that I haven't even mentioned? — Isaac
...if you're not willing to defend that position, then why post it? — Isaac
But I don't see what my personal meta-ethical stance has to do with your position.
How does your caricature of my position further your argument or counter the points I raised against it? — Isaac
It might do. You've not given any account of what makes things right yet, so 'our ancestors did it' is currently as good a contender as any. — Isaac
Life and chess are incomparable. The fact that one can move on from a game like chess is another reason why it is a false analogy. — NOS4A2
But what is tragic about that? Death would be an end to suffering. Continuing to live would mean continuing to suffer. If you resign from a game, you continue to suffer. If you "resign" from life, you don't. — Ciceronianus
So because you don't see it, I must be playing dumb? Seems a theme. One wonders what exactly you expect from a discussion forum whilst assuming everyone else simply must see the world the same way you do. — Isaac
Why? — Isaac
Not my place to. I'm critiquing your post. — Isaac
But Putin wants to reconquer at least part of that greatness and this is the end result. Yet in the end Putin will be like Milosevic for Serbia, an absolute disaster.
And now we have a huge conventional war in Europe, a war that is in it's eight year. Hopefully this will end in Russians rethinking just how smart holding to those imperial aspirations is. — ssu
Imperialists see the World as zones of control. Other states can actually believe in the sovereignty of nations. — ssu
And this question comes even more close to home for me: Why did Finland and Sweden choose to join NATO and not stay out of the military alliance. Well, it's kind of obvious, actually. You really have to be quite clueless not to understand why. — ssu
No. It ought to be. — Isaac
An odd question. As if we do other things for other sorts of reasons. Why do you go for a walk? Why do you seek relationships? Why do you listen to music? I'm struggling to see why eating meat has to have some existential urgency to it that other activities lack. — Isaac
The naturalistic fallacy just expresses your belief that what is natural is not necessarily what is good. It might be. It's not like you've got some competing theory of what is good that is more coherent. I think that if we want to eat meat, but we also want to see animals happy, we have to find a way of achieving both, or balancing those desires. I'm not seeing any argument as to why one of those desires must be met but the other is to be discarded. — Isaac
I don't understand. You're not forced to play chess for fear that (lest) you'll kill yourself? — Ciceronianus
Yes. It's like the ludicrously idiotic idea that if Poland would have accepted Germany's demands (Danzig and the corridor to East Prussia), WW2 would have been prevented and Hitler would have announced that "Germany is satisfied with it's territories" and Hitler's Germany and the World would peacefully coexisted until the present. As if Hitler would be that kind of guy, who builds up a mighty army and never uses it (and forgets everything he has promised to do in his book).
Of course it doesn't make sense. But the US has to be the bad guy. Always. — ssu
However when it comes to the war in Ukraine, Russia's aggression and imperial objectives are so evident, so clear, that is hilarious to uphold the "NATO enlargement made Putin do it" -card. — ssu
I agree, but I don't think you've made the case that a well cared for farm animal wouldn't feel good over its lifetime even if raised for slaughter. Even harder with an egg-laying chicken, or a fish. — Isaac
I was reacting to an implicit moral argument on your part with a description of what I think is a factual issue. The fetus and babies will seek out more life. — Bylaw
I have not argued that having babies is good. I don't think that even makes sense. — Bylaw
We havta ponder all the negative aspects of life; it's a necessity if we're into selling life tickets (making babies). — Agent Smith
Some make the accusation that Putin is acting in self defense, or at least defense of what is rightfully his client state. Because the US has been supplying military aid to Ukraine, the idea is that Putin reacted in a way that should have been predicted. Therefore the fault goes back to the US and NATO. — frank
You may play chess again, but in that case you play a different game, you don't play, again, the game you chose to end by resigning. — Ciceronianus
Some are saying that, yes. — frank
The controversy in this thread? It's hard to say. I've asked, and I don't get back anything that makes sense to me. It's maybe just people expressing their angst about war crimes and war profiteers. There's a fair amount of people assuming everyone else is naive about the agendas that give rise to mass events.
I think that expressing angst about all the victims involved is why I'm here. — frank
Any life they create immediately desires life, the organism does, and strives to live. You can only create something living that immediately strives to continue living. — Bylaw
It is not some neutral or negatively aimed at life. It is life that wants to live more. — Bylaw
It seems like you are presenting this as putting someone in a situation it may or may not want. But no, parents can only make life. — Bylaw
What power, if any, do the notions of self-obligation, commitment, command, etc. have with respect to the duties of our future selves? And what does it mean if the self of the present has neither duty to the past nor ability to impose upon the future? Differently, what does it mean if present self has no duty to future self? Does all conservation turn into a whimsical act of self-denial?
Pathologically, when discussing our past selves or future selves with another ("But you promised!"), should we treat those selves as separate moral actors/agents? Do we disavow ourselves? — Ennui Elucidator
I didn't say it did. I responded, I think pretty clearly, to this idea of a parent throwing someone into life. A someone who may or may not want life. I think that model is confused. — Bylaw
I never said anything about embracing life's game, whatever that means. — Bylaw
I am talking about an organism doing what it can to live, both on a cellular level and to whatever extent it can as it can move. There is no incarnating a not wanting life organism. — Bylaw
I'm not arguing that one can change the game of life. — Bylaw
it strove for life — Bylaw
