By the way, you have conceded the point expressed in the following question cum statement: — TheMadFool
If life is so pretty, why the heck is there religion, promising escape (nirvana) or a better deal (heaven)? — TheMadFool
Answer the question Khaled, friend, is Utopia possible? — TheMadFool
is it possible to make life, on balance, happier than sadder? What say you? — TheMadFool
What are the implications as far as dire circumstances if no X? — schopenhauer1
This is swinging to the other extreme. — TheMadFool
If life is so pretty, why the heck is there religion, promising escape (nirvana) or a better deal (heaven)? — TheMadFool
Is it really veering from what I've described in past posts? — schopenhauer1
above a certain difficulty of escape (where escaping comes with dire consequences) inflicting something is wrong. — khaled
inescapable [set of challenges] you are putting someone else in that can't be opted out without completely dire consequences. — schopenhauer1
My whole point is that work is an injustice because it is an inescapable — schopenhauer1
free riding (making it other people's problem), or outright suicide. — schopenhauer1
Inescapable, etc. You can opt out of the surprise party if you really wanted. — schopenhauer1
Putting someone in this no opt out position is an injustice along with all the harms of life. — schopenhauer1
Pretty much. — Banno
The world is not what we experience, it is what is the case. — Banno
then the rest of us either have to endure the effects of that stupidity - in a pandemic unnecessary sickness and death - or fight it. — tim wood
Without prejudice, if you've been campaigning to inject your whole community with something which you later suspect is either unnecessary or worse, harmful, aren't you in exactly the same boat? Aren't you going to pay an even heavier price for admitting they were wrong. — Isaac
it's doable as long as you don't give a shit -- but they won't play nice with you — Olivier5
They don't just calmly review the consensus opinion to conclude "Hmm not sure I can agree with that". No, they have chosen their camp in what they see as one of the most important battle of mankind, and they attack the other camp aggressively, and anyone defending it. Because they care. — Olivier5
Worth asking just what, exactly, they care about. I'll wager they do not know, and can only at best rant at any such question. — tim wood
the need to "bash one's opponent on the snout." — tim wood
If you willfully participate in the ostracization of people for exercising their inalienable right to bodily autonomy, you were never a gentleman to begin with. — Tzeentch
And yet the stuff "out there" does enter into the conversation. — Banno
The direction of fit here is reversed, in that we intend these words to be about whatever it is that is "out there". — Banno
It's not luck, it's a process of eradicating versions that are dysfunctional. — Banno
But apples are not the raw perceptual data they cause us to have. — Srap Tasmaner
But there's no coherent way to talk as if we're not modeling — Srap Tasmaner
"It's the view that something exists regardless of what we say about ___." What on earth do we fill in the blank with? — Srap Tasmaner
The whole point of modelling is that within the model, tables quite specifically count as real. Real is theory-relative. — Srap Tasmaner
Evan if all we see is the way things seem to be to us, there may still be the way things are. — Banno
So a realist says the ball has a mass of 1kg; the anti-realist might say that saying that it has a mass of 1kg is useful, or fits their perceptions, but will not commit to it being true. — Banno
Yeah, that's rather the problem I was trying to highlight, but from the other side of the coin. The anti-realist says "things are only as they seem to us to be", but that 'things are only as they seem to us to be' is itself a way things seem to them to be. We just don't seem to get anywhere using that line of thought. — Isaac
Does "whether or not stuff depends on what we think" depend on what we think? If it does, you're not really an anti-realist, as you admit realism is just as valid. If it doesn't you're a realist about something. — khaled
But all of those things (and states) are still unarguabley some way things seem to us to be. — Isaac
Tell that to a corpse. Or to a quadriplegic. Or to an overheating planet. Or ... — 180 Proof
So if we're to talk about the difference between the way things seem to us and the way things 'actually are', we must first allow for the fact that 'the way things actually are' is still some way things seem to us. — Isaac
What I'm saying is that you never see outside of the mind-created world within which all the — Wayfarer
If it's something that nobody ever knows anything about, then it's not anything. — Wayfarer
Realism, as spelled out 'roughly' in the OP, is that stuff exists whether anyone knows about it or not. — Wayfarer
I'm not following that. Anti-realism presupposes realism? Why? On one side we have that stuff is independent on what we say or think, on the other, that stuff is not dependent on what we say or think. How does stuff being dependent presuppose it not being dependent? — Banno
When you perceive something - large, small, alive or inanimate, local or remote - there is a considerable amount of work involved in ‘creating’ an object from the raw material of perception.
realism holds that ...stuff... is independent of what we say about it
— Banno
So, the role of the mind in creating the world should have some bearing on that, ought it not? — Wayfarer
an object from the raw material of perception.
And it is because we are trait equalizing the traits true of a given human to that of a given animal. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
human already has that property, and thus it cannot be given to them, and likewise the animal doesn't have the property, thus they cannot offer it as a trait to give. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Btw, a large minority of humans are within the range of intelligence or consciousness comparable to that of agricultural animals. I’m not sure if framing it that way wouldn’t be another category error, but we’ll go with it anyway. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Well, an easy one to start would be a god-like being, or an alien species with much higher intelligence, and probably the vast majority of sentient life throughout the universe, supposing there are some. Either way, I could cook up so many hypotheticals that I don’t know where to start. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I’m representing someone else’s argument. It is clear what they mean by it and I extended that clarity to you. If you do not wish to engage in a critique of my rebuttal, then that’s fine, but I’m going to spend my time with those who do. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
The question that was originally given asks you to name the trait, or set of traits, true of the animal that if true of the human would justify killing them for food. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
or you otherwise must provide a counter argument for one of the supporting premises to NTT by naming which traits justify the disproportionate attribution of moral value between humans and animals. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
On the latter answer, what if we imagined the person who you love, or enjoy, tolerate the most was turned into a pig, cow, or chicken. This applies the same logic, that if a being is a cow, pig, or chicken, then it is morally acceptable to kill them for food. So if the person you care about the most was turned into one of these animals would you thereby kill them for food. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I mean, sure, some people eat apes—also some people eat humans, however this is a minuscule, fractional subset of the general consumption of animals. To narrow down and focus on such an irrelevant subset of the general, more broader concern is to try to trivialize it, when what WE ARE CONCERNED WITH is THE BROADER VIEW. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
It’s analogous to objecting to arguments made that killing humans is wrong, by appealing to the fact that we kill humans who are murderers and child rapists. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Just name the trait or traits true of animals that if true of humans would justify killing them for food. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Indeed. Especially when I have already defined the term. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Your answers include: “Is a member of the Homo genus” this is a category error — Cartesian trigger-puppets
it entailed the absurdity that It is ethical to kill genetically modified non-human humanoid beings — Cartesian trigger-puppets
“Is not a cow/pig/chicken” again, category error, but conversely it entails all sorts of absurdities, namely that all non-cow/pig/chicken beings are immoral to kill for food (what of plants or bacteria?) — Cartesian trigger-puppets
"Is a member of the great apes" so it’s ethical to kill Dolphins, Orcas, conscious androids, genetically modified hominids, extra terrestrial beings with greater sentience? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Ok, name a few... — Cartesian trigger-puppets
however in common usage it generally refers to Homo sapiens, the only extant member. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
In the hypothetical, the term "human" will be defined as modern homosapien. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Instead of trying to alter the hypothetical, why don't you just interact with it as it is stated. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Perhaps my wording is a bit confusing, however I do clearly state that — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Suppose we genetically altered a subset of the human species so that they could no longer bear fertile offspring, thus making them a distinct species. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
It doesn’t. You should read the post in its entirety. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
However, it is purported that every trait, or set of traits, named in attempt to justify the disproportion of moral value logically entails a commitment to an absurd moral position — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Moreover, in another such hypothetical world, we can imagine three traits that have been equalized: not being a member of human civilization, lacking moral agency, and not willing to reciprocate mutual cooperation with other humans. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
In considering the named traits, we can easily imagine a scenario of beings who lack all these traits, and yet most would find it absurd to condone killing them for food. Suppose that we discover an indigenous population of humans who reside outside of modern civilization, have no shared group morality, and are openly hostile towards other groups of humans. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
They are desperate for recognition, and, when it stubbornly refuses to arrive, they are drawn to make increasingly extreme pronouncements, in the hope of finally being proved a dogma-busting, 21st-century Galileo.
Ultimately, is a daily severe suffering of a single hungry Yemeni child worth your daily happy time quota? Daily severe suffering of a single sentient animal? Your logical honest answer would be NO. Your delusional dishonest illogical ego-centric emotional would be YES. — RAW
Moral nihilism has a bad reputation, but isn't that what we are espousing? — Down The Rabbit Hole
So a takeaway here, there is something about the forced game, similar to the "happy slave" that is not right, or suspect. — schopenhauer1
Y'all's take: As long as there are sufficient choices in life (for surviving, entertaining, relationships with others, and even killing yourself) that is freedom. — schopenhauer1
The option for suicide, homelessness, or dying in the wilderness, doesn't make the forced game any more fair or right to make people play. We are not "panning out" far enough to see the limited choice of the game of life. — schopenhauer1
What are your answers to all of this? — khaled
The people (mostly) like the game, have taught their children to like it, and are comfortable in it. In fact, the degrees of decisions by the generations that came after resemble life in all but origin. — schopenhauer1
I have given you the reactions over time. This is probably true of the original people maybe — schopenhauer1
Worst case scenario: They were pretty successful in life and so miss out on a lot (bad). — khaled
So you are now going down that slippery slope it looks like that if someone didn't exist at time X, it's okay to do something in time Y to them when they will exist. — schopenhauer1
I mean in this logic, as long as a slave was born into conditions of slavery, it's okay because the slave knows nothing else. — schopenhauer1
the question is supposed to highlight as to what degree of freedom a human must experience in order for a forced situation to be legitimate. You aren't answering that one. — schopenhauer1
What are your answers to all of this? — khaled
I haven't seen you in any other mode when dealing with me. — schopenhauer1
Try engaging other posters too. Seem to be particularly targeting my posts.. — schopenhauer1