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[–]necius 130 ポイント131 ポイント  (48子コメント)

This comment is largely repeating ideas covered in the video, but I think it bears repeating.

A lot of people seem to be troubled with the inclusion of speciesism in the realm of other -isms (like racism, sexism, ableism), but it's based on a simple principle that most people agree with:

Each individual should be treated according to their own characteristics, not the characteristics of any (often arbitrary) group to which they belong.

Some people argue that racism is wrong because there's no difference in capacities between races (which the science suggests is true). But even if that weren't the case and (for example) Caucasians had an average of 10 IQ points less than Asians, that still wouldn't be a justification for treating an individual Caucasian as less intelligent than an individual Asian because that individual Caucasian may be as intelligent, or more intelligent than the individual Asian (not to mention the problems of using intelligence as a barometer for worth, but that's a topic for another discussion).

This is, in modern times, not controversial. Why then is it controversial to say that each individual animal should be treated according to their own characteristics and not the characteristics of the group to which they belong? And, perhaps more importantly, why is similarity to humans (in both biologic and cognitive capabilities) so often considered the barometer for the value of a species?

[–]heitapoistili17 29 ポイント30 ポイント  (16子コメント)

Each individual should be treated according to their own characteristics, not the characteristics of any (often arbitrary) group to which they belong.

When you say that, many people probably understand it as:

Each individual human should be treated according to their own characteristics, not the characteristics of any (often arbitrary) group to which they belong.

Just like previously when people spoke about "everyone" they really meant white men.

[–]V9pK8BeSNk28t2Qy 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (14子コメント)

This also means vegetarians and vegans would likely disagree with it, at least those who rely on neurological distinctions or basic biology to separate animals from not animals. Are trees individuals?

[–]majorurges 10 ポイント11 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I thought the veg philosophy was based on suffering. Trees cannot (at least as far as we can understand) suffer, right?

[–]V9pK8BeSNk28t2Qy 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I think that's one version of it, at least. I was just pointing out that "individual" ends up doing a lot of work in this argument, and sort of obscures the distinctions--like suffering or not--that matter to people.

[–]necius 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (1子コメント)

The definition of individual I was using above is a biological organism (or possibly, in the future, a true artificial intelligence) that has a subjective experience. A tree is a biological thing, not an individual, because it is not capable of having a subjective experience.

[–]Central_Incisor 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

This is, in modern times, not controversial. Why then is it controversial to say that each individual animal should be treated according to their own characteristics and not the characteristics of the group to which they belong? And, perhaps more importantly, why is similarity to humans (in both biologic and cognitive capabilities) so often considered the barometer for the value of a species?

At what point can we describe that? From a nature standpoint, we all exist to survive, animals are parasites of all chlorophyll based life or sometimes mutually beneficial. When I was growing up there were plants and animals and the jury was out on what viruses were called.

Personally I think the thing that the author uses as a blind spot for the audience is that all human life is almost sacred despite that humans do not treat it as such despite recorded history. I almost think we kill humans over less than what would be symbiosis.

[–]Marthman 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (15子コメント)

A lot of people seem to be troubled with the inclusion of speciesism in the realm of other -isms (like racism, sexism, ableism), but it's based on a simple principle that most people agree with:

I think the main problem is that this is a strawman argument- given that we're seeking out the best opposing arguments and not seeking out low-hanging fruit, it is thus disingenuous to even pummel this strawman in the first place. For example, if you're an intellectually honest academic speaking on atheism, you're not going to treat all theists as if they are bumbling creationists. You're going to fairly look at the stronger arguments that come from, say, kantian theists, and/or classical theists such as Thomists.

And that's the thing: "speciesism" is simply a mischaracterization of the best arguments in favor of benign carnivorism, and positions that defend animal husbandry (but not the mistreatment of animals). For it is not in virtue of one's species membership that one is determined to be morally considerable, as these utilitarians would conceive carnivorists to be arguing; rather, pace utilitarians such as Bentham, and other sentiocentricists who establish "capacity to suffer" as the criterion by which we establish moral considerability (through nothing but intuition, mind you), it is having well-being (an intensive contra extensive magnitude) that establishes moral considerability in the first place, and from which we can move forward with reason.

What would this mean exactly? For starters, it means that, pace thinkers like Korsgaard (who aren't even utilitarians), there is no arbitrary division between living things like plants and animals/humans. That isn't to say plants have equal considerability however- for the degree of well-being a kind (not species) of being is capable of determines how morally considerable such beings are. In other words- we proportion moral considerability to the depth of well-being a kind of being is capable of, regardless of whether such material capacities are frustrated, in respect of the dignity of those kinds of beings.

The point is to suggest, pace utilitarians and even non-utilitarian thinkers like Korsgaard, that plants, unlike non-living things such as kitchen appliances and rocks, have some degree of moral considerability due to the fact that they have well-being (in virtue of being alive) to consider. Granted, plants don't deserve much moral consideration, but it would be ridiculous to suggest, despite have well-being to consider, that they are like rocks in this regard.

It's bizarre to me how thinkers miss that, though I will admit that at least Korsgaard is aware of such arguments, though she appears to deny them. Nevertheless, it seems quite fallacious to argue that some beings with well-being don't deserve any moral consideration just because one wishes to move the goalposts so that they may engage in animal rights rhetoric.

I'm sorry, but I just don't buy it for a moment. It is morally wrong to just stomp a sapling out of anger in a way it is not wrong to punch a pillow in anger. It is wrong and vicious to throw a plant in a dark closet without sun and water in the way that it is not wrong to store away an automobile for years on end without attending to matters that would keep the car functioning, such as changing its oil and making sure that it is properly maintained for continued function; for cars and air conditioners and rocks do not flourish- but plants, just like all other living things, can flourish, and do have well-being to consider, though their well-being is often trumped by beings who, by nature, have greater material capacities (again, whether frustrated or not- this point is important because we could not intelligibly speak of disability and dysfunction without it) for realizing greater degrees of well-being.

This is the dirty secret of the sentiocentricists. Well, actually, I take that back. It's not really fair, because most sentiocentricists are completely oblivious to the principle connection between well-being in general, and moral considerability; and they are often mistaken, as Norcross is, that well-being is some sort of extensive magnitude- when indeed, it is an intensive magnitude which is realizable to some degree by, and intelligible in, different kinds of beings. And thus we rationally proportion our efforts of moral consideration relative to the degree of well-being a certain kind of being is capable of, rather than arbitrarily deeming some life with well-being morally irrelevant, based on irrational sentiment that is largely motivated by vestigal cognitive biases.

The intellectual bankruptcy of individuals who use puppies and kittens in their thought experiments to sophistically persuade and emotionally strong arm mature homo sapiens members into veganism is contemptible- and the reasoning they use drives people to abominable conclusions in various other ethical matters.

Frankly, and for lack of better words, it pisses me off. And it pisses me off because not only can we still recognize why we should treat all living things with respect (which means factory farming is wrong, but that animal husbandry and recognizing that animals and plants genuinely can be used as mere means to an end is right), but we can also see the value of certain kinds of beings and respect their inherent dignity, whether their capacities are frustrated or not (which is why refuges for abused but "unintegratable" pit bulls are good, and why PETA is abominable for the sheer number of animal deaths they cause)- and thus recognize, but not on the basis of any utilitarian calculus, that certain kinds of beings deserve respect as the kind of being that they are- for in their being alive they can ideally, under our guidance, provide us with services in pursuit of the good.

I know that philosophers frown on example giving, but I simply cannot resist. Domesticated cats and dogs are, in virtue of the kinds of being that they are, naturally capable of essentially (contra accidentally) promoting greater degree of realization of well-being in human beings (i.e., agents who can hold the good as their end, and thus are invaluable to the pursuit of the good, the highest [most general] principle) under our stewardship. This is recognized by science. It's not that the human being is gaining some well-being in an incidental way, as she does when she maintains her car and feels proud and accomplished. It is that there is a certain kind of relationship (not exactly based on intelligence) that some nonhuman animals are naturally capable of having with human beings. Dogs, cats, chimps, gorillas, dolphins, killer whales- these beings ought to be respected in virtue of the service they could provide given the kind of being they are (whether they are taken and trained under the stewardship of moral agents or not)- for they are capable of essentially causing a greater degree of well-being in human beings through the sorts of meaningful relationships they can form with them.

But cows, chickens, pigs, rabbits, etc. though some of them furry and cute, are not capable of providing these services to us under our guidance because they are not those kinds of being. Intelligence, in itself, has nothing to do with moral considerability, so just because dogs and pigs are similar in intelligence means nothing. The pig is not the kind of being that is naturally capable of forming bonds of loyalty and love that raise the degree of well-being (the very thing that determines moral considerability) realized by other things. And thus, dogs and dolphins are afforded a greater status than sharks and pigs, regardless of how smart the latter two can be.


As for race, it is an arbitrary division, the scientific instrumentality of which has been determined to be non-existent. Therefore, it has been jettisoned from our scientific purview, and rightly.

[–]jacksonkeirmclean 24 ポイント25 ポイント  (10子コメント)

I'm curious what makes you so sure that pigs, cows, and chickens cannot form the same kinds of bonds with humans that dogs and cats do. I have friends who own all three as pets and argue that they form a closer bond with them than most people do with cats. What makes you think that because they haven't traditionally been given the opportunity to do so, that they lack this potential?

Not trying to throw out your well-thought out argument entirely or dwell on your example, but I'd suggest that the bar be moved down further when giving such an example, say using earthworms for instance. Then we can debate where the line should be drawn, if that's a valuable exercise.

[–]inekarma 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Okay, you're comment sort of pisses me off too.

First, you're claiming some things are morally wrong, that many people think are not, like storing a plant in a dark closet. Because of they can flourish? It seems more arbitrary to me than to say it would be because of suffering. And it all comes down to what is valuable.

Objective values, that you're referring to, are not at all agreed to even exist, and you're claiming with absolute certainty that it is indeed objectively wrong to do a thing that most of us would intuitively think is not wrong, wrong. Maybe you should read some metaethics, about moral error theory and non-cognitivism in particular to shake some of that certainty away. You're giving anything any value can always be argued as arbitrary anyway, irreducibly normative things are queer and that's a thought shared by many scholarly philosophists. You don't give any new argument against the queerness argument so I would argue that you're not really in any position to dismiss all those. I suggest you read for example some Jonas Olson, for contemporary arguments or Mackie for the classic.

Now we can think of values as some other way as well, not as something objectively existent, but something that has someone to give value to. And that's an easy way to argue that animals have value, because they are able to suffer and that is of a negative value to them, hence its wrong.

It's not as easy as that for plants, I would argue that because, best that we know of, they aren't conscious, they can't give value to anything, so they don't have value through that. They may have value through some other, conscious being, giving them value, but that doesn't necessarily mean that storing them in a dark closet would be wrong. As you could actually get some satisfaction of that, maybe you're trying to dry the plant or something a or maybe it's a weird fetish of yours doesn't matter.

[–]Marthman 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

First, you're claiming some things are morally wrong, that many people think are not, like storing a plant in a dark closet.

So are you telling me that you see no intelligible, morally significant difference between stomping on a sampling and stomping on a rock without justification? (That's not a rhetorical question).

I understand most people have been trained to think in a certain way, but just because most people haven't given time to think about the [relatively insignificant] moral status of living things that do not feel pain, doesn't mean negatively affecting their well-being isn't wrong.

Because of they can flourish?

Because they have well-being just like any other living thing. What do you think the good is? How else could the good be intelligible to us but as the well-being inherent in all living things [as the good in itself]? Well-being is inherently good- not pleasure, nor comfort. Nor is pain or suffering necessarily bad.

It seems more arbitrary to me than to say it would be because of suffering. And it all comes down to what is valuable.

Do you believe that causing suffering in a being is inherently unjustifiable?

Objective values, that you're referring to, are not at all agreed to even exist, and you're claiming with absolute certainty that it is indeed objectively wrong to do a thing that most of us would intuitively think is not wrong, wrong.

Hold your horses there. This whole conversation starts with "if there are morally objective facts, then..."

I'm not claiming anything with absolute certainty.

Maybe you should read some metaethics, about moral error theory and non-cognitivism in particular to shake some of that certainty away.

Thank you for your suggestion. I'm well aware of the variety of anti-realist positions in metaethics.

You're giving anything any value can always be argued as arbitrary anyway, irreducibly normative things are queer and that's a thought shared by many scholarly philosophists. You don't give any new argument against the queerness argument so I would argue that you're not really in any position to dismiss all those. I suggest you read for example some Jonas Olson, for contemporary arguments or Mackie for the classic.

Again, this whole conversation starts with the assumption of moral objectivity (I say that, rather than moral realism, only because the person I obviously draw quite a bit of inspiration from is interpreted by a majority of philosophers as an anti-realist constructivist who nonetheless believed in moral objectivity).

It's not as easy as that for plants, I would argue that because, best that we know of, they aren't conscious, they can't give value to anything, so they don't have value through that.

You realize that you're just begging the question, correct?

They may have value through some other, conscious being, giving them value, but that doesn't necessarily mean that storing them in a dark closet would be wrong.

Well, I disagree- if moral objectivity obtains, I think it is necessarily the case that all living things with well-being have some degree of moral considerability, and that the sentience criterion for considerability, based on intuition alone, is not a good one; nor should we simply fall back on intuition in this particular matter, especially given our proneness to cognitive biases.

We have to think through why we believe what we do, not just accept our intuitions and move on. That isn't to say that intuitions do not function practically as good placeholders until we've thought more on the issue, or as "benchmarks" for which we have the burden of answering to.

[–]Pogmog 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (2子コメント)

And, perhaps more importantly, why is similarity to humans (in both biologic and cognitive capabilities) so often considered the barometer for the value of a species?

Probably because "value" is a term only understood by humans, used by humans, and is a human concept in the first place.

[–]ribnag 41 ポイント42 ポイント  (0子コメント)

That is not quite accurate - Not only can other animals understand value, they can understand "fair" pay for similar work, and will actively snub an offer to work for an unfair wage.

[–]jo-ha-kyu 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (0子コメント)

You don't need to understand, use or have any conception of value to be valued or be valuable. There's no (objective) reason why "value" ought to be measured by the yardstick of humanness, none that I can see, anyway.

[–]Unicorn_Colombo 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

there's no difference in capacities between races (which the science suggests is true).

Wrong. Just look at damn olympic games. Generally said, black people have higher chance carrying genes influencing muscle efficiency than any other race. Thats why you see disproportionally more black people in running stuff than other races, running has also advantage of low cost and (in my society) no connection with being either poor or rich (compare to e.g., golf or tennis).

In average, black people have lower IQ (which could be also effect of worse education), asians higher IQ. On the other hand, on average, black people have bigger penises and asians have shorter penises than white people. So it depends what you prefer :P

[–]ingenjor 44 ポイント45 ポイント  (27子コメント)

One thing he didn't address is, where to draw the line? Sure, we can give up eating pork. We can give up eating fish. We can stop cosmetic testing on rabbits. By the same line of thought, should we not also stop trapping mice in our houses, stop swatting mosquitos, avoid killing spiders, avoid accidentally stepping on ants. At what point does a lifeform's ability to feel pain outweigh the want to consume it or the desire to get rid of it?

[–]Omnibeneviolent 14 ポイント15 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I think the line is drawn at avoiding causing harm/pain/suffering as much as is possible and practicable. It's possible and practicable to live a modern healthy life and not eat cows, pigs, and chickens, but it is not practicable for someone to live a modern healthy life without causing some harm to certain beings that pose threats to us.

Mosquitos are one of the deadliest animals on the planet. It would make sense to do what you can to protect yourself when necessary. Chickens pose no threat to us, so we cannot use this excuse to harm them.

Avoiding stepping on ants is not practicable without severely altering one's quality of life. Worrying about this may drive a person crazy because they could never go outside. Simply not eating animals, on the other hand, does not have this same side-effect.

[–]ThePlebFather 27 ポイント28 ポイント  (18子コメント)

You bring up a good point, I suppose it depends on your definition of pain. In my opinion If an animal is able to experience physical or emotional pain on a level that is greater than the pain it is causing us by being a pest, then It's isn't morally justifiable to inflict pain on that animal. Mice can be caught using non-lethal traps and released, which is a better alternative to killing them. In the case of spiders and mosquitos it isn't always as obvious, since some spiders are capable of causing serious harm, and mosquitoes can spread disease, so it is justifiable to kill them in many circumstances.

[–]resolvetochange 8 ポイント9 ポイント  (8子コメント)

What about animals like whitetail deer, that are considered a 'pest' but would overpopulate if they weren't hunted? If a policy of not hurting them is adopted they will overpopulate and then starve. There isn't really a 'no harm' way to deal with that.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (7子コメント)

This is only because other measures haven't been explored. People are quick to turn to killing them as an easy and quick solution without looking into other methods of population control.

We do not have to kill animals to control their populations.

[–]FairBlamer 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (6子コメント)

We do not have to kill animals to control their populations.

What are some practical alternatives?

[–]Omnibeneviolent 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (4子コメント)

I admittedly do not know much about this subject, but there have been efforts to create contraceptives that can be administered to deer via darts or feed to prevent excessive breeding. Perhaps someone else with knowledge in this area can chime in.

That said, even if there currently aren't any practical alternatives (and I'm not convinced that there aren't,) the moral course of action would be to exhaust all other non-lethal non-painful methods of population control before resorting to killing them with bullets. The truth right now is that many hunters and some others don't really want to look into other options; killing other sentient beings is a form of recreation to them.

[–]Justin_Scheibel 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Genetically modifying for lower reproduction rates or using surgical means would be less cruel than killing or allowing overpopulation toward starvation. It is practical but serves no human interests. Therefore human beings would unlikely ever take these measures because humans are very egoistic and their anthropocentrism only extends generosity to other humans in most cases and this would be a selfless act to dedicate resources to humanely restricting deer population to environmentally tolerable levels.

[–]ingenjor 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (5子コメント)

Yeah, this can be debated a lot. I'm sure someone can come up with better examples than mine. My point is that it seems like a really gliding scale so who decides where to draw the line. Seems like the inability to draw a line by reasoning causes the whole philosophical question to be quite arbitrary.

[–]ThePlebFather 25 ポイント26 ポイント  (3子コメント)

There isn't really a clear line, but there are things we do know; animals used for livestock like pigs, cows and chickens are capable of experiencing physical and emotional pain, so killing them to satisfy someones craving for meat isn't worth the suffering the animal has to endure, especially considering the fact the we do not need to eat animals to live a healthy life. We also know that wanting to look fashionable by wearing a Canada Goose jacket isn't a good enough reason to skin and kill a coyote. There are plenty things people will disagree on, and the line won't be in the same place for everyone, but that doesn't make the philosophical question arbitrary.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I don't think the lack of a clear line means it's arbitrary, it just means that there is a spectrum. We shouldn't let the fact that we cannot easily distinguish one side from the other prevent us from action.

As Voltaire so kindly reminds us, "Perfect is the enemy of good."

[–]Djojo_Unchained 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (5子コメント)

By the same line of thought, should we not also stop trapping mice in our houses, stop swatting mosquitos, avoid killing spiders, avoid accidentally stepping on ants.

Interesting questions. I suppose people should try non-lethal mouse traps first, and only use harmful or deadly traps if all else fails (at that point it's necessary self-defense to protect your house against an infestation). Swatting mosquitoes seems to be self defense as well. Yeah you should probably just bring spiders outside instead of killing them (unless it's a particularly deadly type of spider). You can't avoid accidentally stepping on ants because it's an accident.

[–]ingenjor 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (4子コメント)

You can't avoid accidentally stepping on ants because it's an accident.

Well, you can try really hard to avoid it by constantly watching where you're stepping. And wear masks to avoid breathing in flies. Like the Jains.

[–]Djojo_Unchained 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Haha I suppose so, the mask would also help with those 8 spiders we eat in our sleep.

[–]lapse_of_taste 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (2子コメント)

That's an urban legend. Spiders generally avoid walking into human mouths.

[–]Djojo_Unchained 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I know, sorry, it was a bad joke

[–]never_a_crossword 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Not the Javanese Mouth Spider, they love it in there.

[–]scmoua666 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (3子コメント)

I was raised on a small farm, where we ate pigs, chickens and cows we raised, named, fed and cared for. This taught me early on that there should be no difference between eating a dog and eating a cow, as they are both very intelligent and full of emotions we'd associate with humans. We had a dog (which we did not ate), but I always disliked the hypocrisy of people being revolted by kitten deaths and being totally fine eating a chicken which had been through far worse treatment.

My brother then turned vegetarian (still is), and I simply embraced the notion that my eating choices come with the slaughtering and suffering of many animals. I'm actually on a keto diet, which recommends no carbs (almost only meat, eggs and greens).

I could go vegetarian, I think it would be more aligned with my beliefs (that suffering should be minimized). But I'm just there, telling that to myself, eating meat, and waiting for lab-grown meat.

[–]sudden_potato[S] 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (2子コメント)

While it may be difficult, /r/veganketo is a thing.

[–]scmoua666 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Nice! Never considered it could exist! I'll definitely check it out! Being vegan was automatically associated with loads of carbs, lentils, potatoes, etc. I'm happy to see there's an alternative (with hopefully enough proteins).

[–]IndependentNews 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (11子コメント)

Great post, I appreciate this, we really need to think through this, it's important.

[–]PlaneCrashNap 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (10子コメント)

Alright, let's think this through.

Why do we value suffering? Because we suffer. So we're using suffering as metric for human similarity and practicing specie-ism by saying that is what should be considered when deciding if it is okay to kill an organism.

Bam, it's arbitrary.

[–]sudden_potato[S] 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (9子コメント)

Why do we value suffering? Because we suffer.

And animals suffer, and we know that suffering is bad.

[–]PlaneCrashNap 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (8子コメント)

How do we know suffering is bad? Because we don't like it? Last time I checked subjective values don't translate to objective values.

[–]majorurges 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (7子コメント)

What are objective values? What can be said to exist outside of the subjective experience?

[–]BernardJOrtcutt[M] 14 ポイント15 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I'd like to take a moment to remind everyone of our first commenting rule:

Read the post before you reply.

Read the posted content, understand and identify the philosophical arguments given, and respond to these substantively. If you have unrelated thoughts or don't wish to read the content, please post your own thread or simply refrain from commenting. Comments which are clearly not in direct response to the posted content may be removed.

This sub is not in the business of one-liners, tangential anecdotes, or dank memes. Expect comment threads that break our rules to be removed.

[–]keejaycaterpillar 17 ポイント18 ポイント  (131子コメント)

It excludes one factor that I admit influences me. The attraction factor. I find cats much more attractive than pigs. I find dogs much more fun than chickens. Also living with an animal gives it a more human like mental position in my minds hierarchy. Eating a pet becomes like eating a sibling.

[–]necius 108 ポイント109 ポイント  (97子コメント)

Attraction may be why you choose to eat the pig or chicken, but not the dog or cat, but the point is that your attraction to an animal isn't a morally relevant difference. So the attraction factor may explain your speciesism, but it doesn't justify it.

[–]joeyjojosharknado 8 ポイント9 ポイント  (94子コメント)

Why isn't it morally relevant? We feel more of a kinship toward dogs and cats than pigs. By extension we also feel more of a kinship to humans, which is why we don't eat them. Sure, we actually have more of a kinship to humans, of course, but dogs and cats have co-evolved with us as our companion animals. I don't think it's unreasonable to say we don't eat them because of this kinship.

Edit: Guys, this is a philosophy forum. Downvote if you think my comments are not contributing in the discussion, not because you might personally disagree with them.

[–]necius 59 ポイント60 ポイント  (56子コメント)

I don't think it's unreasonable to say we don't eat them because of this kinship.

Again, that is an explanation, but it isn't a justification. One reason to doubt that it's a morally relevant difference is because it has nothing to do with the capacities of the individual animal.

Our kinship or otherwise with animals of a certain species doesn't alter their interests, only our own. If we apply the principle of equal consideration of interests, a pig's interest in surviving still outweighs our interest in the taste of their flesh, even if we don't have the kinship interest in seeing them survive.

[–]Empigee -1 ポイント0 ポイント  (42子コメント)

What if you don't consider a pig's interests equal to a human's?

[–]necius 40 ポイント41 ポイント  (40子コメント)

Even if you reject the principle of equal consideration of interests, and don't consider a pig's interests to be equal to that of a human's, if you believe that a pig's interests matter at all, you almost certainly should commit yourself to not eating them. It seems very difficult to me to justify putting my interest of gustatory pleasure ahead of the pig's interest in life.

If you don't believe the pig's interests matter at all, then that requires justification.

[–]dreamfisher -1 ポイント0 ポイント  (15子コメント)

The interests of a farmer who invested in the pig and has a family to feed matter more to me that the pig's interests.

My interests in eating food that appeals to my taste, rather than a lifetime of eating food that doesn't, matter more to me than the pig's interests.

My interest in feeding my cat matter more to me than the pig's interests.

All in all, one pig's death improves the quality of life of many people and other animals, whose interests matter to me more than the pig's. Especially considering that the pig is alive in the first place only because of those interests.

Of course, that doens't mean that a dog couldn't be killed for the same reason. But in cultures where eating dogs is not the norm and dogs haven't been bred to have the same amount of nutritional value as a pig and it's harder for the farmer to find a vendor for the dog's meat than for the pig's meat, killing the pig generates more value.

[–]imstillinthenight 18 ポイント19 ポイント  (2子コメント)

On phone so please forgive any typos! Trying to respond in order:

With regards to the farmer, it is not a necessary requirement for a human being to live or live well that they kill pigs. It might be seemingly contingent in individual instances, but for each individual pig, living/living well necessarily requires that said pig is not killed, rather than a contingency. After all, you can't live well or live if you're dead. Why then, should we not refocus our efforts on finding new livelihoods for livestock farmers?

You say that your interest in eating food you like appeals to you much more greatly than the pig's interest in staying alive. Can you find a justification for this outside of egoism? Cats are obligate carnivores so I think that it is far easier to provide justification for killing animals to feed them, but this is not the same for humans. Even then, how many pig's lives are worth the life of one cat?

These animals might be bred for meat purposes, but that does not change the fact that they are now alive and have interests. The fact they are only alive to feed people does not waive their interests. In fact, as we deliberately breed them, why are we not answerable to their interests the same way we are to cats and dogs? (I know this is culturally relative, my point is more about making arbitrary distinctions between species. What justifies defining some as pets and others as food at all? Just because we do it, doesn't mean it is right). If anything, I might say that we are being morally irresponsible by actively breeding numerous obligate carnivores such as cats, which require that tens, perhaps hundreds of animals are killed simply to sustain individuals.

Does the death of a single pig really improve the quality of life for so many people, so significantly, that you can say there is a net gain from that death?

[–]necius 15 ポイント16 ポイント  (9子コメント)

What if I did the same moral calculus, but instead of the pig I chose to raise and slaughter humans for food (after all, humans and pigs taste very similar)? Those things could all be equally true, in fact I could imagine that a market for human meat could generate even more revenue than the market for pig meat (I'm sure there's some weird rich cannibals out there).

Can you tell me what the morally relevant difference would be in that situation?

[–]dreamfisher 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (8子コメント)

Because you can't ensure that another person doesn't decide to eat you or your child. So it's in your best interest to create a society where it's not viewed as morally ok to kill humans.

[–]necius 16 ポイント17 ポイント  (7子コメント)

What if we arbitrarily decided to create a breeding stock of humans, which couldn't be added to, so I knew absolutely that me and all of my descendent?

[–]rotten_core 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I don't understand how this is being downvoted...

[–]delecti 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Because nearly all of the arguments rely on tribalism or tradition, rather than any sort of rigorous argument.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Then you would have to justify the reason for this position.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (9子コメント)

That's not unreasonable to say, but it doesn't really address the previous commenters point that there is no morally relevant difference. At best it would be a culturally relevant difference.

[–]dreamfisher 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Because a lot of people feel physically revolted at the thought of, say, people with disabilities, homosexuals, people of another race, etc. If your sole argument for why it's morally ok to kill and eat some things, but not others, is your personal feelings towards the thing, then it's also morally ok to kill and eat those groups of people.

[–]ziltiod94 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (20子コメント)

I don't think it's unreasonable to say we don't eat them because of this kinship.

No, its not unreasonable to say that, because this is exactly the reason people don't.

But it isn't a moral argument for doing it, it is just an explanation. It isn't a justifiable reason.

[–]joeyjojosharknado 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (6子コメント)

it is just an explanation. It isn't a justifiable reason.

Explain to me the distinction please. This seems subjective. Why is 'they are our companions' not a justifiable reason?

[–]ziltiod94 16 ポイント17 ポイント  (5子コメント)

Why is 'they are our companions' not a justifiable reason?

Because it would imply that it is okay to eat those who are not one of your companions; this is similar logic to nationalism: we treat our 'own kind' humanely, but not others.

What needs to be accepted here is that saying that pigs are not considered our 'companions' is not an acceptable reason for eating them.

[–]joeyjojosharknado 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (4子コメント)

Because it would imply that it is okay to eat those who are not one of your companions;

Why is that not OK? No one has actually made an argument for this yet. It remains in the 'just because' category thus far.

[–]Anvil_Connect 12 ポイント13 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Let make take this one, /u/ziltiod94 .

There's a lovely thought experiment called "The Veil of Ignorance", a sort of golden rule 2.0.

Basically, pretend you're a floating spirit, soon to be born into the world as a human. You don't know what sex, class, race, location, orientation, nationality, or privilege you're going to be born into. Now, make the rules of society.

Not knowing what you're going to become is the "veil of ignorance" which you are behind. What this exercise does is remove you from your demographic. You're more likely to create extremely fair rules in this scenario, since you want to give yourself the best chance no matter what group you end up in.

So, then would you declare it morally acceptable to just eat non-friends? I feel like "as long as everyone consents" and "don't be an ass" are more likely. This exercise forces your moral standards to be internally consistent.

Now, we can perform the veil of ignorance again, except you don't even know if you'll become human. You might be born a pig or a fly. If you're born a lizard, you don't give a fuck about spending time with your family. With this in mind, you'll probably start making rules like "Do no harm without consent, and give considerations to the desires of all beings, without placing moral obligation on others to meet those desires, only not impede them".

This version of the exercise forces your internal morality to be consistent across species.

But why should you care? Here's a good reason: AI will become smarter than us. And very different than us. Do we want to teach it a morality that says less intelligent beings don't matter? The desires, hopes, and dreams of beings different than it don't matter? What if this AI extends you the consideration you extend animals?

Having a morality system that doesn't give special exceptions to an arbitrary section of thinking, feeling beings is vital to being internally consistent, fair, and justified.

[–]joeyjojosharknado 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (2子コメント)

But why should you care? Here's a good reason: AI will become smarter than us. And very different than us. Do we want to teach it a morality that says less intelligent beings don't matter? The desires, hopes, and dreams of beings different than it don't matter?

That seems to me to be a binary proposition. Either we matter or we don't. But if we're attaching value to self awareness, then it seems to be scalable when talking about animal rights. For example: is it morally wrong to eat a pig but not a lizard? To eat a lizard but not an insect? Where do we draw the line and why?

[–]BarkinBear 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I draw the line with desire. I think a lot of simpler animals are physically incapable of understanding mortality. A fly doesn't fear death, as I understand the fear death requires the concept of mortality, and the concept of mortality requires the concept of self. They lack the hardware for the concept of self. Instead, I think it fears swift moving thingies in their direction - if it even fears. This is besides the point, but they may be closer to a set of programmed reactions that anything approaching emotion.

In this view, killing a fly isn't immoral, you're not violating it's desires, but slowly plucking off limbs without some seriously good justification might be immoral. If it can feel pain and doesn't want to feel pain, then it's immoral. Likewise, turning off your pc isn't genocide, those programs have no desire to live or self preservation. Deleting an AI with a concept of self, self preservation programming could be immoral. (Just program it to "want to turn off if it's makers want to turn it off" when programming its desires and boom, problem solved. Not so simple with emergent AI, though.)

This view has a lot of unavoidable left gray zones. Do dogs understand mortality, and so fear death? If so, killing them without good justification is immoral. They definitely feel pain and don't desire it in most cases, so kicking them is immoral without good moral justification (such as self defense). Since they exist in the mortality gray zone, it's best to play it safe.

This view provides a clear set of criteria: desires create negative rights, and we play it safe in gray zones. (Negative rights are rights others are not obligated to fulfill, but are obligated to avoid obstructing without sufficient moral justification).

There is a snarl with it though. Does the fly's desire to have its next meal create a negative right that obligates me to not kill it? Is the moral justification for killing it such a low bar that this negative right doesn't require much consideration? How does one determine the height of such a bar? After all, my natural life span and intelligence could easily be that of a fly compared to an AI, so if I want a consistent morality I need to answer these questions. I'm still working on them.

This is... somewhat... similar to asking if it's immoral to turn off a PC if operations are still planned, though PCs don't have desire. I don't think turning of a pc is immoral, and maybe the lack of desire is the fair justification of that? On the other hand, I'm not convinced killing a fly for fun is moral. For sanitation? Probably.

So, what do you think of this "drawing the line at desire" view?

[–]taddl 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Even if bugs and lizards were conscious, that would not justify killing pigs for your own convenience, it would mean that we should also care about bugs and lizards.

[–]Empigee 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (11子コメント)

Why wouldn't kinship be a justifiable explanation? We generally consider ourselves more obliged morally to our relatives and friends than to people we don't know.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (10子コメント)

We may consider ourselves more obligated to not harm those close to us, but is it more moral to place the interests of someone higher simply due to their relationship to oneself?

It may seem like an instinct to say yes, but our immediate response is not always the moral one.

[–]aaaaaaaandy 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

From a utilitarian standpoint it is morally relevent, but it should only effect the outcome if the other interests at stake are equal (or really similar). Like if you had to choose between killing a dog or a cow, killing the cow would be justified.

If the interests aren't even near equal though (like an interest to eat meat and an interest to live) your kinship basically becomes irrelevant (like adding/removing a grain of sand from a desert and comparing it to a sandbox). Thus if its wrong to kill and eat a cat it is also wrong to kill and eat animals suchs as cows.

[–]atnormanΦ 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

but the point is that your attraction to an animal isn't a morally relevant difference

It can be, certainly. Kant was against cruelty to animals because of how it reflects on us as people, so thinking about cute animals as more important than non cute animals here at least has precedent.

[–]PeppeLePoint 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (7子コメント)

Have you considered it might just be affirming the consequent?

You have a pet, which makes the type of pet more attractive, therefore those pets are more attractive.

I would say that respect for other animals and respecting your own pet are not mentally taxing nor mutually exclusive.

[–]keejaycaterpillar 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Oh owning a pet definitely does that. Which makes me interested in how different people around the world would answer depending on what household pets are common there

[–]giotheflow 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

I think, yesterday on All, there was a video of North Korean refugees eating pork BBQ for the first time. They talked about how the Government forced them to supply dog fur each year or they will be fined. How it was a culture shock coming to S. Korea and seeing dogs raised for pets and not for slaughter. How they would get a choice between a few grams of meat a week or enough rice to feed a family for the week. It was a really fascinating video.

[–]keejaycaterpillar 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I bet so, North Korea itself is really just interesting enough!

[–]giotheflow 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I found the video here. It's also really interesting from a foodie perspective!

[–]UUUUUHHHHGGG 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Have you considered it might just be affirming the consequent?

You have a pet, which makes the type of pet more attractive, therefore those pets are more attractive.

Affirming the consequent is the following invalid inference:

If P, Q.

Q.

So P.

Can you show me how your example affirms the consequent?

[–]PeppeLePoint 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (1子コメント)

It excludes one factor that I admit influences me. The attraction factor. I find cats much more attractive than pigs. I find dogs much more fun than chickens.

If P, Q: "You have a pet, which makes the type of pet more attractive"

The Implied Q (those pets are more attractive) -- not explicitly stated after the first sentence, but that seems to be the intention beyond a reasonable doubt.

And then P: "therefore those pets are more attractive [and shouldn't be killed]"

So long as "P" follows closely after... No where in the world of syllogism does it require every single element to fall exactly into place for it to be sound. The point seems to be that you are the only one who can reify a myth regarding the state of animals in your own life. Its about being logically consistent between arguments.

[–]UUUUUHHHHGGG 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

No where in the world of syllogism does it require every single element to fall exactly into place for it to be sound.

I don't see any resemblance at all. It seems to me that you misused the term. But you really should be able to identify which parts of a statement play which role in the syllogism, if that statement is meant to contain a valid inference.

With that in mind I feel as though your intention was clear from the get go.

I don't know what this means.

My somewhat counterpoint was that the amount of effort required to be good to all animals is quite low.

Perhaps. I wasn't interested in the ethics debate.

[–]KajuMax 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (0子コメント)

So if you're uglier/more boring than your sister, can you be eaten by your parents?

[–]Tim2728 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (11子コメント)

Yeah but does that remove the moral agency from those other animals? Why don't you eat other people that you don't have close a close relationship to? Or why don't you eat your neighbors pet if you don't feel close to it?

I feel like any justification for eating meat don't use actual rational behind them. Instead they are more just disillusions to cover up immoral behavior.

[–]keejaycaterpillar 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (10子コメント)

I would have to say the answer is in having morals ourselves. A bear wouldn't hesitate to eat me if it was hungry and it would never stop to consider if I was too intelligent to eat or if it was wrong. Animals dont seem to display morals like we do. Thus eating something that would eat you seems fair. Where as eating a person who might rationalize against eating you seems wrong.

[–]lnfinity 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (0子コメント)

If someone else doesn't consider the harm of their actions does that make it okay for you to not consider whether or not you harm them? For example can you harm young children or the severely mentally handicapped because they aren't considering the consequences of their actions in a similar way to how you would?

[–]DevilsAdvocate2020 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (4子コメント)

Bears are not at a level of cognition that allows for rational pondering of right or wrong. If a bear was a proper rational moral agent in the same sense that we are it would likely lead itself to the same conclusion that eating any one living being is no different than eating any other living being.

Like the video says, it doesn't really hold up that we are justified in eating bears simply because they are more ignorant than us and are unable to think on the same level. A mentally handicapped person may hit you because he doesn't know what he is doing, but that doesnt mean it's okay for you to hit him, does it?

[–]PlaneCrashNap 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Yeah that does give you a right to hit him back. It's called self-defense.

It doesn't matter if something doesn't know it's acting immorally. Most people think they are moral even if they aren't being moral. Does that make them irresponsible for their acts and thus the consequences? NO.

Similarly, the bear not being a rational moral agent does not excuse it from just being a cold-blooded killing machine, and by virtue of that, has no complaint to being treated similarly.

[–]DevilsAdvocate2020 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Do you slap babies as hard as you can after they slap you as hard as they can?

[–]PlaneCrashNap 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

If the baby's slap could make me a bloody mess against the wall, yeah why wouldn't I? A bear is significantly more dangerous than a bear, and mentally handicapped people aren't necessarily harmless.

Anyway, the real question you have is, "Why kill a bear when you wouldn't kill a dumb human," and the answer is humans have laws, bear have claws.

If you're going to treat something like a force-of-nature, then it can be treated like a force of nature.

Babies are dependents, and our future, bears are not, mentally handicapped are not.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (2子コメント)

There are two reasons we cannot use bear behavior as a moral guide: Necessity and accountability.

  1. Necessity: Bears need to eat other animals to survive and be healthy, while modern humans in the developed world generally do not. To bears, it's literally a type of self-defense, as if they do not eat other animals, they will likely die. Modern humans in the developed world cannot use this excuse.

  2. Accountability. We do not hold bears accountable for acts of violence for the same reasons that we do not arrest toddlers for assault and why most legal systems typically give lighter sentences to the cognitively impaired. There is a certain amount of knowledge of morality and the difference between right and wrong that is needed to be held accountable when one does something wrong. To put it simply, they don't know any better. Adult humans without severe cognitive impairments don't have this excuse.

[–]Amokzaaier 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (1子コメント)

[–]Omnibeneviolent 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I feel like you have been waiting to use that joke for years. Nicely done.

[–]joeyjojosharknado 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Animals dont seem to display morals like we do.

Social animals do have behaviours that are essential for group cohesion and functioning, which is almost certainly the origin of our morals (or the foundation of them at least). For example, social animals have behavioural 'taboos' in killing and eating other group members. We see dogs and cats as members of our group, as our companions, but pigs are not. In this sense not eating dogs/cats (but eating pigs) actually makes sense in the context of our innate moral behaviour.

[–]utsavman 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I'm attracted to white people more than black people, therefore slavery is okay.

[–]egehan[🍰] 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

This can be explained by different psychological mechanisms, which are a result of how our relationship with these animals have been. Its hard to reverse, because one needs to overcome that initial dissonance

[–]veneaux 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Have you ever actually grown up with pigs or chickens though?

A part of you ought to be able to recognise that you're displaying a level of bias bolstered by your prior exposure to cats and dogs comparative with other animals. Pigs are one of the loveliest animals there are, I could never bring myself to consume one again.

[–]Numella 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Love the guy but the lack of facts or simple statistics gives more credit to less credible statements and vise versa

[–]sudden_potato[S] 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Which parts did you find not that credible? I have a bit of knowledge in this area and might be able to find some statistics that confirm/deny his claims.

[–]AlbinoMooseCat 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (4子コメント)

One thing that wasn't considered here - cats, dogs and lions are carnivores. There's a reason we feel more repulsed by the idea of eating them, because it poses a greater risk to our health.

[–]betweenTheMountains 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Do you really think that's the case? Horses are herbivores, and many people are repulsed by that. So are pandas, elephants, rabbits and many other animals that people do not want to eat. Also, people DO eat dogs and cats in many cultures, and do not seem repulsed by it. It may be the case that carnivores pose a greater health risk (I am not sure that is even true, I haven't heard it before), but I do not think that is a primary consideration for most people.

Second, it was considered in the video, it simply falls in the broad category of things that are not morally relevant to the discussion.

[–]lapse_of_taste 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Dogs are not carnivores. They can actually survive without meat.

[–]pugmommy4life420 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Any proof? I've never heard of a dog not eating any meat and surviving. As far as I know their kibbles is made from meat and not wheat or anything close.

[–]necius 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

The dog Bramble, was exclusively fed a vegan diet and lived for 27 years. At the time of her death (or immediately before it, I suppose) she was the world's oldest living dog.

Aside from her, many dogs are actually prescribed plant based diets by vets when the fall ill.

Dogs do just fine without meat.

[–]antesdelunes 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (5子コメント)

I think one failure of this video is its oversimplification in its approach towards animal production and consumption which ends up prone to the the usage of falacious argumentations: it lacks the principle of charity and ends up creating a strawman - mixed-up wide appeals to emotion - when it characterizes the entirety of poultry production, for example, as handled in its most reprehensible way - by keeping birds in small cages, cutting their beaks, etc.

But what if the discussion was framed on the basis of the production of free range chicken for example? Yes, the animals killed at the end of their production cycles, but to argue that they live cruel and painful existences would be untrue. Even the death of a chick can be "humane": instantaneous, stress and pain free; so, once again, depending on how we frame it the discussion would be entirely different.

The video argues on the lack of coherence in wanting to eat certain species of animals and not others and basically decries "specieism". There are a whole range of beliefs that justify this practice (which you might agree or not with but are valid nonetheless): You could be an animist and believe that certain desireable (or unwanted) traits are transfered from the animal to you; your religion can specify that certain animals are "dirty" and some are not; your religion requires the slaughter and consumption of certain animals (which has to do with animism, like catholics eating fish on Easter friday).

On a more practical level it makes more sense energy-wise to consume herbivore animals, like lamb or poultry, than a carnivore animal like a cat, whiere you add yet another step into the foodchain. Plus, the consumption of meat from carnivores present much higher health hazards for humans.

[–]sudden_potato[S] 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (4子コメント)

1st, Free- range chickens aren't really treated that much better than normal chickens. It's still cruel. They are still kept in very high stocking densities, many still beak trim etc. So I don't think it's a strawman, as much as cruelty is the reality of the industry.

But if we were to imagine a completely idyllic farm, then would it be permissible? That's a question that (I think) is answered very well in this paper Eating Animals The Nice Way, by Jeff Mcmahan.

[–]antesdelunes 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (3子コメント)

I've raised small flocks of free range poultry - chicken, turkey and ducks. I always treated my birds with respect and dignity, uptil the moment of their slaughter, where we always had great care to avoid any innecesary suffering. I know what I'm talking about from self-experience.

So I don't have a problem having an argument on the sacrifice of animals itself, but including elements of pain and suffering into the discussion is deceptive and, in the case of the video you linked, falacious.

[–]sudden_potato[S] 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

I'm sure you raise your poultry well, but the vast majority of meat is not raised like that, so the video is still useful and accurate.

Also, you can see the objections to even killing animals for food who've had a good life in the paper I linked.

[–]antesdelunes 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I read the whole thing. One of the phrases that caught my attention the most was this:

Of course, human intuitions about the moral status of animals are so contaminated by self-interest and irrational religious belief as to be almost wholly unreliable.

I found it interesting because, for me, the author commits the exact same mistake that's inherent to religious morality: He regards humans as being different of in a different category than animals. That humans are above animals and have a moral responsability to animals which include providing them with a bunch of anthopicized attributes, including personhood.

I do not agree with that vision. I regard human beings as an animal species first and foremost, belonging to the animal kingdom, subphylum vertabrate, class of the mammals, order of the primates, family of the hominids. As other living creatures I assume that their ultimate purpose as a species in life is to be born, to grow, to reproduce, and eventually to die. I also regard their intelligence as an evolutionary accident - which might or might not allow them to perdure succesfully (other "dumb" species have been around for hundreds of millions of year without it). Humans might as well be extint in the near future and that eventuality will not affect the continuation of life in this planet. I, as a member of the humans species, do not want us to go extint so I recognize that protecting the environment, for example, is in our best interest in the long term.

It is also part of our best interests to treat animal well before slaughtering them - benign carnivorism. It's not just a feel-good thing (which is also important for the human psyche by the way): Well treated animals have better inmune systems, are less prone to diseases, are less prone to self-harming, gain more weight, do not become agressive and harm each other. Also treating animals translate to people treating well fellow humans (less sociopaths), which is good for us as social creatures.

Under this point of view, assertions like the following from your article make no sense:

It may be good for animals to be caused to exist by the practice of benign carnivorism; but that is compatible with there being no reason to have the practice that is grounded in animals’ interests.

It is grounded humans' interests therefore it is grounded in animal's interests.

[–]alawa 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

It is grounded humans' interests therefore it is grounded in animal's interests.

But do our interests in wanting to eat steak instead of tofu out weight an animals interests to live?

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 25 ポイント26 ポイント  (89子コメント)

First off, philosophy shouldn't concern itself with objectives (except for objective truth) and it's apparent that this video inclines itself to a singular viewpoint.

Secondly, the arguments proposed against animals could be extended to eating plants and their potential offspring if you assume plants suffer too. I realize the idea of a plant suffering seems immediately silly, but it should be relevant to the discussion and I doubt it can be completely disproven considering that suffering is merely a systemic response to negative conditions. Plants do bend toward the light, so they do have survival "instincts" and that freshly cut grass smell is a chemical first aid response.

Thirdly, the Speciesist argument is thrown out unfairly. The argument is that our species is allowed to do what we'd like to other species because we arrived at the top of the food chain through our evolutionary development. The narrator then states that we'd believe differently if we weren't in the ruling species, but this doesn't negate the logic of the argument (in fact, it's kind of the point of the argument). He then goes on to racism, which occurs within one species, to further this point. Again, the logic doesn't follow. Later in the video he doesn't seem to get the hypocrisy of stating that philosphers would like congruence in their beliefs.

Lastly, the narrator tacitly states that we can survive without eating meat, but doesn't address the long-term effects this might bring. Certainly meat has been a common aspect of the human diet for a long time and changing that diet across the whole species hasn't been done before, so to say it is without consequence is to ignore the point totally.

I get that it's not a popular opinion to be pro-meat-eating when it's viewed as the strong brutalizing the weak, but if we approach the subject from the stance of sustenance and consider that other animals wouldn't hesitate to add us to their diets if given the opportunity, it can at least be discussed in a more objective framework.

[–]Jevans2497 43 ポイント44 ポイント  (55子コメント)

A big problem with that though is the process of energy conversion. The animal you're eating had to eat 1,000s of plants to produce a relatively meager amount of meat. In terms of need, eating plants is sufficient. On top of that, afawk, the consciousness of a plant and an animal are at the very least somewhat different enough that to our knowledge, plants don't feel things the way we or any other animal might.

Also this idea that since we are the ruling species we can do as we please but if we weren't, we would not like that is purely about empathy. Sure we have that right by some argument, but that doesn't make it right.

Also, with the wide scale effects of sacrificing meat eating, it would be almost completely positive from what we've seen. Factory farming is one of the leading causes of climate change (along with being a big drain on other resources) plus the health benefits would be tremendous as we have seen a lot of health problems come from red meat and other high cholesterol products. Sure some people would have bad diets as vegetarians and vegans can but arguably, there diets would be better than the alternative. The moral reasons on a grand scale are also significant.

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 7 ポイント8 ポイント  (19子コメント)

Definitely. I think there are plausible arguments for vegetarianism (or some hybrid version), though I'd like to see more data. For instance, the idea that animals require more resources seems reasonable, but plants (especially edible ones) have their own resource requirements and I'd like to see more extensive studies done specifically addressing the pros and cons between the two. What about animals that eat things we don't? Would they not be edible under a logical stance of eating things that don't require conflicting resources? Not denying, just want more information.

As far as the differing feelings between plants and animals, I would agree whole heartedly that they are significant. However, that fact doesn't immediately affirm that plants are without "suffering". The way different species of animals feel pain is also significant. This might lead to an ideology that certain animals might fit the narrative of being morally eaten because they lack the requisite amount of "suffering". Again, not denying, just want more info.

But really, my main problem with the video isn't the idea of not eating meat. That might logically follow, but we can't arrive at that conclusion through one-sided arguments. If a video poses itself as a philosophical discourse, I would expect more objectivity in the treatment of the subject.

[–]Jevans2497 15 ポイント16 ポイント  (16子コメント)

I will say I do agree it was a bit one sided but personally, I think the arguments for the other side are somewhat weak and are more often trying to justify convenience and morally reprehensible behavior (at the very least that's my perception). To your first point about animals and plants differing energy, I can help point you to a few facts that might give you some idea of why eating animals is energy inefficient. For one, 80% of the grain grown in the US is used an cattle feed meaning all the grain you see in a supermarket or elsewhere is only 20%. On top of that, although it's an approximation, there's an idea known as the 10 % rule (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten_percent_law) that basically says as you go up the food chain, less energy is wasted. So the sun gives 10 energy units to the plant, which gives 1 to the animal, giving .1 to the Human. Obviously this is not totally accurate but you get the idea. Since most animals these days aren't eating grass and are instead eating somewhat human food / are eating food that could be something else with the right incentives, I would argue that it is inefficient, unnecessary, and wrong

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (15子コメント)

What about crabs? Their diet consists of things we don't generally eat. More to the point, why choose animals as the arbitrary line for moral reprehension? Why isn't all life as important? It's natural to appreciate and care for animals (at least for most people), but philosophy shouldn't be concerned with comfort or instinctual desires.

I like the arguments for sustainability and climate effects and I see them a lot, but I don't see a lot of data with them usually. I'd like to see more and I feel like the video would have been a lot better to include them in a more substantive way, but, I'm really not pro-meat, just against the video posing a one-sided argument as a philosophical discussion.

[–]yo_soy_soja 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (14子コメント)

What about crabs? Their diet consists of things we don't generally eat. More to the point, why choose animals as the arbitrary line for moral reprehension? Why isn't all life as important?

Because morality/ethics is about balancing the interests of individuals. If a plant has no consciousness or no desires, then it's not an individual with interests.

philosophy shouldn't be concerned with comfort or instinctual desires.

Really? Why not?

[–]PlaneCrashNap 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (12子コメント)

Because then you end up not being able to feed yourself, because there is no appreciable difference between you and that carrot you want to eat.

In the end it all boils down to specie-ism.

[–]yo_soy_soja 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (11子コメント)

Because then you end up not being able to feed yourself,

Sorry, I don't understand what you're referring to. What exactly are you responding to?

[–]inekarma 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (1子コメント)

You realize that the arguments they use against animals suffering is the same as we typically use for not causing suffering in other humans? You can make the point that it's not really a good argument (which I definitely agree with you), but you can also not use against human suffering then.

For the energy argument you're giving, it's hard for me to see how it is not impossible for meat consumption not to require a vast amount of more energy than plant consumption. While it's true that some animals do eat some things we don't, there's not that much difference in the required energy for different crops than how much we need to feed the cattle. So even though the crops we feed animals with would need 5% of the energy that the crops we eat ourselves, which it probably does not, it would still be less to eat vegan. Besides we should be making environment friendly decisions on what to eat as a vegan too and we can eat more of the crops that take less energy. And that doesn't even take in to account the fact, that to have room for the cattle, we have to cut down rain forests and it takes A LOT of water as well. Water use is strictly regulated in many places during draught and it seems idiotic to me, that we punish people for using it for using it irresponsibly for some things while allowing people to keep eating meat which effectively uses more water.

Edit. A word

[–]PlaneCrashNap 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (26子コメント)

The consciousness of plants isn't similar enough to us so that makes it okay to eat them?

That's just specie-ism with a fresh coat of obfuscating paint.

Suffering is suffering. If you make a distinction based on similarity to our suffering, you're saying what matters is similarity to humanity based on the metric of stress response.

In the end, vegans and vegetarians still practice specie-ism, they just hide it better.

[–]Jevans2497 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (14子コメント)

Well like I said, eating plants instead saves tons of plants lives vs eating animals that ate even more plants. Although eating plants could be considered speciesism, it is not only necessary but also afawk, very different to the point where at the very least, it's somewhat more ethical

[–]PlaneCrashNap 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (13子コメント)

Alright, let's consider the scenario where we've completely switched to eating plants. We're still causing the suffering of plants and saying that's okay. We're valuing the suffering of plants less than the suffering of humans because of specie-ism, which is unethical as there is no morally significant difference to justify a difference in value.

It being necessary to our survival does not make it moral, as that's saying our own survival is more important than the plants, which is yet again specie-ism which you are arguing against.

[–]Jevans2497 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (12子コメント)

But what I'm saying is by not eating animals you save the most plants which I think if it's a choice between the two, one is objectively better in terms of lives lost. Furthermore, I would argue that plants, unlike the vast majority of animals, are incapable of, afawk, anything beyond extremely simple thought. Sure I see the irony and that it's easy to say, no other animal is capable of complex thought like us but I think the distinction between humans and animals is pretty thin compared to animals and plants. Furthermore, many plants desire to be eaten as it furthers there growth, unlike an animal. Also, the animals that are used for meat today live in atrocious conditions while the plants are treated to significantly better lives in terms of desire

[–]PlaneCrashNap 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (11子コメント)

Alright, let's break this down. I'm pointing out that your logic is not different from the meat eater. You're both specie-ist, it's just that the meat eater is less inclusive.

It doesn't matter that you're saving plant lives if your foundation for those lives having value is untenable.

I've made it clear why it is untenable; to include other animals in the "suffering matters" category and not include plants is arbitrary because there are no differences between them that aren't spurred by specie-ism which is arbitrary by your own admission.

If you allow specie-ism, the meat-eater becomes okay, because he's just a more stringent specie-ist.

Plants don't desire to be eaten. They desire their reproductive fruits to be eaten, but that doesn't mean it doesn't cause them harm. And to value that harm any differently than an animal's would be specie-ist.

It doesn't matter the range of difference between animal and plant and human and plant as that shouldn't matter to a non-specie-ist.

[–]Jevans2497 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (10子コメント)

What I was saying is that the plants have much better lives than the animals so producing them from either a speciesist approach or the opposite is still better overall unless you think plants have no value whatsoever. But what I'm saying is also from both viewpoints, by not eating animals, you're saving more plants and more animals

[–]PlaneCrashNap 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (9子コメント)

But with a specie-ist perspective, plant and non-human animal life might not matter.

And without a specie-ist perspective, you have no moral excuse to take the life of any other organism for sustenance.

The conclusion being that trying to apply morals to nature is idiotic.

[–]Jevans2497 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (8子コメント)

It's not idiotic. Basically the way I would see it is you either kill yourself, don't care, or minimize loss and they all have different levels of morality

[–]majorurges 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (10子コメント)

Wait, but doesn't science count for something. If it is proven that nervous system is needed to feel and experience pain, then why CAN'T we use that as a metric? Do we also extend suffering to rocks? To water? No, and with good scientific reason. It's shown that pain is the result of a nervous system. If you take away that nervous system, you take away pain.

Now you seem to be saying that "well, what if?" but we cannot base our behaviors on a hypothetical, non-plausible what-if scenario.

You give a plant a nervous system, then it can feel pain and you have the potential for mental and physical suffering. Without that you do not.

[–]PlaneCrashNap 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (9子コメント)

You're right, they don't suffer like we do. They still die like we do. Are you saying death isn't something you suffer?

When you say suffering, you define it as the pain us humans feel, then depending on how similar animal stress responses are to ours, we include them.

In the end, you're using suffering as a metric for human similarity and thus value. Specie-ism. With. New. Paint.

[–]majorurges 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (8子コメント)

But then if I take your argument further, is it specie-ism to treat rocks differently than another person, or an animal? Isn't treating the non-living differently from the living the same specie-ism you are saying I'm guilty of? What metric are we to use to objectively differentiate and apply value?

Also, and I'm not being cheeky (I'm new to this sub) isn't value inherently subjective? How can it not be based on some sort of experience?

[–]PlaneCrashNap 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (7子コメント)

It's not my argument, it's your logic extended to it's conclusion, and yes, you do reach that conclusion that you can't treat non-organisms differently from organisms. It becomes ridiculous and ends up with you sympathizing with anything and everything and dying trying not to move an inch. Glad you could catch on.

And in my opinion, yes, you're right that value is inherently subjective (it doesn't exist, we just ascribe it to things). Everything is inherently non-moral. Morals only exist as social constructs due to their usefulness.

Obviously a non-moral serial killer isn't useful, so obviously we need to have morals, but if we extend morals in ways that aren't useful and are detrimental to our species like limiting human potential, you end up defeating yourself.

[–]majorurges 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (6子コメント)

So if you believe that my logic leads then to the ridiculousness, is your opinion that we should move in the opposite direction, away from increased sympathy regardless of the suffering it causes?

And what does it mean to limit human potential? What is the goal of the human being?

Edited two words

[–]PlaneCrashNap 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (5子コメント)

Like I said, whatever helps humans. It appears to me that in this case misguided sympathy is stunting, but that doesn't mean less sympathy is always better. Take it by a case-by-case basis. Obviously I'm not advocating for everybody killing each other as that's not really what I want.

Human beings have no objective, goal, however, they have inclinations to reproduction and survival. So the continuation of our species could be interpreted as our "goal". Empathy helps, but it appears it can also hurt.

[–]majorurges 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (4子コメント)

How is the sympathy misguided? To be misguided it would have to be goal-oriented in the first place, no? How is it stunting human potential?

Are human inclinations moral? Are they something to treasure innately, or modify because of our unique position in the world?

[–]LogicRulesOverAll 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (4子コメント)

The animal you're eating had to eat 1,000s of plants to produce a relatively meager amount of meat.

The vast majority of the feed animals eat is corn, which is mass produced with a large amount of infrastructure already invested by farmers, e.g. tractor equipment, combines, watering equipment, gmos, etc. We make so much corn that a significant percent of it actually goes into ethanol rather than being eaten.

[–]Jevans2497 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (3子コメント)

But of course we would change our consumption habits to meet demand so after a short time, I don't think that's relevant

[–]LogicRulesOverAll 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

How short a time do you have in mind? If there is a slow transition over more than a century, then the damage to our food infrastructure would probably be minimal. If the change took place over less than a couple decades, then our food infrastructure would be severely damaged.

[–]necius 15 ポイント16 ポイント  (3子コメント)

While the possibility of plant suffering can't be dismissed outright, nor can it be assumed. There is a wealth of supporting evidence of the sentience of animals from a range of scientific disciplines. There simply isn't the same wealth of evidence pertaining to plant sentience, and the evidence that is usually put forward in support of it can be explained by simpler phenomena. If plants were sentient, then these arguments would have a bearing on our treatment of plants, but that's a big if.

I agree that the presenter should have gone further into the dominance argument, but I also don't think your characterisation is fair. You argue that the logic doesn't follow when comparing speciesist dominance with racist dominance, but there's one very important way in which they are the same: they use the same arguments. If you look back to the way that slavery and other forms of racist dominance were historically justified, those justifications were, in fact, very similar to the speciesist arguments we hear today. Assuming that you reject those arguments for racist dominance and accept those arguments for speciesist dominance (which appears to be your position), you have to be able to point to the morally relevant difference between the two situations.

At no point does the narrator say that changing the world to a vegetarian or vegan diet would be without consequence, but the evidence suggests that the effects on most areas of concern (health, environment, suffering, poverty) would be a net positive, even if it wouldn't be a positive for every single issue or person.

I don't think your proposed framework is, at all, more objective. Rather, it's a framework in which you feel more comfortable. To take your beliefs, and claim objectivity, is exactly what you criticise the present of doing.

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (2子コメント)

I'm honestly not arguing for meat eating. I know it seems that way because the video is obviously against it and I'm criticizing the video, but that's basically my point.

Here's something more to what I mean, in your initial paragraph you imply having sentience as the point at which it's morally acceptable to eat something. I would argue that point is arbitrary. Why, cosmically speaking, is sentience given more weight than life in general? Why are we here and what's the point of all this? I don't know and our moral conclusions are defined by our arbitrary acceptance of some point of acceptability. It's easy and popular to choose sentience as a point of acceptability, but it is an arbitrary point nonetheless that usually seems to be based on comfort (which, ironically, you correctly point out about my arguments). I notice in the video he talks about a lot of animals we eat/use, but none of them were less-likable or morally ambiguous animals, like crabs or snails, because they don't support the argument as well and lead to further questions on the meaning of suffering, sentience, and the like.

I'm more pragmatic. For instance, I would have preferred that the video go more in depth for why it's not sustainable to eat meat as an objective philosophical argument. I would have also preferred the video to be labeled something more direct towards its obvious bias. Philosophical discourse should provide decent arguments for both sides and I feel like the arguments for meat eating were quickly dismissed. It should be like a court battle with equal representation, but this case was obviously one sided.

As for the racism argument, I've got to go back to plants (man, I must love plants). The moral difference between racism and meat eating as defined by Speciesism would be the species in question. You throw out the plant suffering argument because of sentience. How is that not the same as allowing meat eating because of the species? It's an arbitrarily defined point at which it's comfortable to morally accept. I'm not saying it's right, but philosophy tends toward open-ended questions.

[–]necius 10 ポイント11 ポイント  (1子コメント)

From the perspective of a plant, life can't go better or worse, because there's nobody there to have that perspective. Once an organism becomes sentient, it becomes an individual there for whom life can go better or worse. The reasons plants don't matter to me is because they don't matter to themselves. In this way, I think it's justified to select sentience as a divider between who has interests, and what does not have interests. There may be a degree of arbitrariness to it, but it's still far less arbitrary than any other dividing point (like species). This is covered in a lot more depth by Singer.

I agree with you that they should have presented the opposing side of the argument more strongly, but if they presented opposing viewpoints with equal weights that would create a false balance. The fact is that, even though ethicists can't even agree on a fundamental view of ethics, the bulk of ethical thought considers the consumption of animals for food (at least as it's done in the developed world) as problematic. I also think it's important to point out that the presenter, Hank Green, is not vegetarian (I don't know about the writing staff, but Hank has the final say on what is said). So while it may be true that he represented one side of the argument more prominently than the other, it doesn't seem plausible that this is because of personal bias.

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I love your argument for sentience. It's clever, but if you extend it out, then why care for the planet, since it also doesn't matter to itself any more than a plant does? I'll read up on Singer, maybe he tackles this question, thanks for the resource.

As for the video, I would have liked it to present the best arguments available for both sides and let the listener judge the better argument. As it was, it quickly dismissed eating meat and so do many people that are against it. I'm not super-pro-meat or anything, but we are talking about a practice that extends back beyond antiquity. If it's a matter of cost, people would opt out of it for economical reasons. If it's a matter of resources (which it might be), then overpopulation is too. Will our solution to that be "stop populating" or could science lead us in other directions for both? If it's a health issue, then so is a slew of other things, should we give up anything potentially detrimental to life? If it's a moral reason, then why stop at animals?

It is truly a great philosophical question with more than one viewpoint, but perhaps, admittedly, one more correct than the other. I don't know the answers, but I feel like the video didn't even address all the questions. It just presented a singular view as a philosophical discussion and I felt the need to open it up a bit more for additional input. Coincidentally, people's responses have been awesome and I'm glad I did. So, thank you! :)

[–]Hiephoohallo 13 ポイント14 ポイント  (3子コメント)

The fact that we're on the top of the food chain is the only reason we CAN behave like this, but says nothing about wether we should.

And in what way do the arguments that justify speciesism not allow racism? I thought hay was pretty compelling.

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Agree with your first point, but it is an argument nonetheless and should be addressed better.

The Speciesist argument as presented would necessitate that we view species differently. Racism is wrong, but contained within a species, so it doesn't effect the argument. At best it implies the moral argument against Speciesism, that we should treat each other (and, by moral extension, other animal species) equally, but the whole point of Speciesism is that species aren't equal. Not saying I agree, just that it isn't good logic.

[–]Hiephoohallo 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I disagree. It is a non-sequitor. There really is no response possible or necessary than to say, this argument does not support the conclusion. "Humans are on top of the food chain" is not a better argument for why we may disregard animal suffering than "humans have kneecaps" is.

As for your second paragraph, racism is wrong because it attributes value based on irrelevant factors, eg skincolor. Here it is pointed out that 'species' is also irrelevant. Or at least unsubstantiated. You could argue that species axiomatically is relevant, but then you would have to concede that it would not be immoral for a more powerful species to eat and torture humans as well.

[–]JamesOfTheYear 9 ポイント10 ポイント  (2子コメント)

I know the whole 'plants have feelings' thing is a grey area, but i was under the impression that a nervous system and sentience are required in order to suffer

[–]lapse_of_taste 8 ポイント9 ポイント  (2子コメント)

Secondly, the arguments proposed against animals could be extended to eating plants and their potential offspring if you assume plants suffer too.

Why should we assume that though?

Plants do bend toward the light, so they do have survival "instincts" and that freshly cut grass smell is a chemical first aid response.

Neither of those are conscious processes.

Thirdly, the Speciesist argument is thrown out unfairly. The argument is that our species is allowed to do what we'd like to other species because we arrived at the top of the food chain through our evolutionary development.

Sure, but that's basically "might makes right". Can we also rape and torture animals?

Lastly, the narrator tacitly states that we can survive without eating meat, but doesn't address the long-term effects this might bring.

Which long-term effects? As dieticians will tell you, a meatless diet can be just as healthy.

but if we approach the subject from the stance of sustenance

In that case, it's fairly obvious for a lot of people that they don't have to eat meat, unless they live in very remote places or something.

consider that other animals wouldn't hesitate to add us to their diets if given the opportunity,

Other animals lack the ability to consider their food choices and - in the case of tigers, for example - lack the ability to survive on a vegetarian diet. So that point really doesn't matter.

[–]inekarma 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (10子コメント)

What negative effects are you thinking of if we go full vegan? It's hard for me to make a serious negative point about that, most of that I could think of simply comes down to the change (ie. We would lose a ton of jobs). However, it's not really even possible that most or all people would go vegan immediately, meaning that the job loss and change overall would be gradual which would negate many of the negatives.

Also, we would simply have so much more food, which is what money eventually reduces to as we all need food, simply because we could be eating what we are feeding the cattle with (which is a lot more food than we humans eat), with modest alterations to what we grow.

For health your argument does not really stand at all either, since it's the high meat diet we westerns have that is detrimental, and while it's maybe open if indeed a very low diet meat diet would be better than a vegan diet, it's pretty much proven that a vegan diet is a lot better than a high meat diet. For dairy there's a lot of health reasons as well for not eating that as well.

https://saveourbones.com/osteoporosis-milk-myth/

http://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/cutting-red-meat-for-a-longer-life

Also the fact that meat consumption is absolutely disastrous to this planet, it seems to me an easy decision to ditch meat.

[–]Redditosaurus_Rex 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (3子コメント)

Definitely agree that your points have bearing. I'm not pro-meat, just against the video posing as a philosophical discourse while really being a one-sided argument. For example, none of your points (or counter points to those points) are really tackled in the video. Also, why are we inherently more important than, say, plants? Why cut our consumption at the point of meat vs some other arbitrary point (life vs consciousness vs suffering)? How has meat effected our development over a much longer timeline?

Also, there are opposing scholarly positions to what you're stating as fact. Here's another paper written by authors associated with Harvard Medical School (along with others) that counter yours.

http://jamanetwork.com/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/intemed/23009/ioi110027_555_563.pdf&routename=jamainternalmedicine

I'm not saying your wrong because I don't know everything, but it does make for a great philosophical debate if both sides are represented to the best of their arguers' abilities, unfortunately this video didn't do that.

[–]inekarma 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I'll answer you better when I have time in a few hours but I read the abstract from that and the conclusion doesn't seem like it's stating anything that would contradict with what I said : " Conclusions: Red meat consumption is associated with an increased risk of total, CVD, and cancer mortality. Sub- stitution of other healthy protein sources for red meat is associated with a lower mortality risk"

[–]inekarma 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Okay, I'll give you a bit deeper answer now.

Why do we think we're more valuable, and that causing suffering for us humans, is wrong, and not all other life capable of suffering? It's not enough to say that because we're human and that humans are valuable, we need to say why. This has throughout history been a very hard thing to do. Some have tried to say it's because our cognitive abilities which are better than in animals. Okay, but what about children and mentally handicapped, we can cause them suffering then right? You can make the point of potential future abilities for children but that line of thought isn't available for mentally handicapped, or for the elderly either. So we can't base it on cognitive abilities. And I don't know what else we could base it on, maybe something in bible or other religious book, but that really isn't philosophy either.

Only coherent way to base it that I've heard is to base it on suffering and to me it seems very intuitive. We don't want suffering and neither does animals, and what makes us better is some way that the suffering for us would somehow mean more? Notice that I am not saying that it is equally wrong to kidnap and torture a human as it is a cow for example. But that's because there's greater amount of suffering caused by kidnapping the human, mostly because humans can have more empathy for other humans than animals do for other animals. This argument is originally from Peter Singer and I very much encourage you to read it (I think the name of the article was concerning animal rights or something).

For plants I would make the argument that in our best knowledge they probably don't suffer or if they do it's probably to a lot smaller amount than us. Also I'm not advocating that it is wrong to cause suffering in any circumstance, because we're able to suffer too, and I don't blame someone for killing an animal for example to eat, if he would greatly suffer if he didn't. I only do blame (mostly in my thoughts though, or if someone wants to discuss it philosophically, thank you for it by the way) if the alternative, mainly plant based diet, would cause themselves no harm (and in fact is available) and especially because

A) eating meat, probably, actually causes themselves harm, and

B) it causes harm for all the other people through the environment and because we actually don't have enough to eat because most of us do eat meat.

And for these reasons I think eating meat isn't justified and, I do recognize the ethical point of view as arguable that it's ok to eat animals, as you can be a speciesist and there's really nothing to say you would be objectively wrong in doing that (that's because it just boils down to the irreducibly normative values, and well, we don't really know if those even exist), but because of the environmental issues with it, I would hope that in some near future it would actually be against the law. But I know that probably isn't happening.

Edit. Or actually not meat eating, some hunting for example we do not for the meat but for better reasons and I wouldn't be making that illegal and it would be actually bad for the environment if we didn't eat the animal that we already killed. But raising animals for food should go in my opinion for the reasons that I have stated.

[–]Koloradio 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (5子コメント)

It's worth remembering that no domestic species is natural. Most cattle are descended from the now extinct aurochs, pigs were domesticated from wild boars, dogs from wolves. While dogs may not live the free and wild life of the wolf, they're doing much better in evolutionary terms (diversity, population size, reproduction). Domestication is, essentially, a wild species losing its 'freedom' in exchange for a supply of food, protection from predators, and guaranteed reproduction (well, for the studs anyway). I bring this up because it touches on a little considered consequence of treating humans and non-human animal's equivalently: if everyone in the world agreed that it was wrong to eat meat, domestic animals would likely die out, or worse, be released to wreak havoc on natural landscapes.

There's still an argument to made for reducing animal suffering, ending factory farms/feedlots, etc. but it's worth thinking about the fact that the violation of an individual animal's interests (say, not being eaten) was the reason that species came about, the reason domestic animals have been so successful, and is necessary for the continuation of the species.

[–]inekarma 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (4子コメント)

I think there's an easy solution : we just end the cycle. No more reproduction, eat the last ones and then it's done with. A species doesn't have the ability to suffer and its not like we're losing a gear deal of variety in the biosphere by doing this.

[–]Koloradio 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (3子コメント)

But do cows and pigs really win if their species is wiped out? Continuation is the biological prerogative, the closest thing there really is to a 'purpose' in life. I guess my broader point is that extending human standards of morality to animals in the name of moral consistency runs counter to Darwinian selection. Morality is a human concept that does not derive from any true first principles. It is and always has been defined by and for humans.

[–]inekarma 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I agree with you in that I also think morality is human invention and that's why in the end all ethic arguments, after it's settled that the one's who are arguing about it have all the same factual knowledge and if they still disagree, it's never going to get anywhere probably.

And that's why I already said that you can think otherwise of the ethical problem, you can also not see any problem. But that applies to any problem we may have. Even say killing human babies brutally, torturing them first. I could tell you why I think it's wrong and all the things that I think that would make it wrong but in the end, if you would still be saying that no it's not, I wouldn't have any argument other than that you're wrong because my intuition says that. Maybe the moral law is there, like the moral realists say, but they surely have not proved it. It could be that it's not, like the moral error theorists say.

To tackle on if it would really be in the pigs and cows favor if their all species got wiped out? No it would not be, but that's because a species doesn't have an interest. The interest the pigs have is to not suffer, have sex and have food, once their dead, they don't have any. Or at least it's very hard to see how they could have. And although the last pigs and cows would maybe lead a bit lousier life than the one's before them, due to mostly probably of not getting to have sex, I don't think it would make that much difference. And after they're dead, it's over. That's where the cognitive abilities do play a role : they can make you suffer for things that you would not suffer without them (think of for example insults using language, you can't hurt an animal through that and while you can make a point that a pig or a cow wants to have children, I doubt not having them would make it very sad when it dies). Besides the fact that there's no way for us to even tell them that they're whole species is going extinct, they wouldn't know that when they die.

But like I said, the ethical argument is not one that you have to swallow. But if one wants to be environment friendly, there's just not no other way than to not eat meat, or at least cut down on the consumption of it to a bare minimum, since I would argue it wouldn't really hurt you either but would probably be the best decision for this planet.

And if you think it's wrong to hurt the environment, well then the ethical argument does work too, because you would be bringing the environment factor to the ethical spectrum.

Edit. And about the darwinian selection.. I don't think that really works as an argument. I mean I agree that it's against the darwinian selection. But I have never heard an argument that we're supposed to somehow work for the darwinian selection, or not break it. I'm also working against gravity every time I'm jumping, or even walking. Doing something against a law of science is hard to argue as somehow unethical.

[–]inekarma 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I just want to give some more input in this as I think this is a very interesting debate. And don't think I don't see your points (while I did argue some of them is in my opinion not really good arguments, but some of them are) , I was a meat eater for a great deal of my life and I don't expect you to change your views (I sure as hell hope so though). My arguing may seem a bit harsh, and frankly maybe it is, but that's just because we're talking about some very important values of mine. I'm not in the business of judging others, I don't think of a meat eater as any less moral person necessarily, they have different point of view than I do. And maybe I can find something in their values to clinch to to make them change their views or do more research in the area or stop and think if eating meat is really something that even brings value to their life.

Also I would like to add that I think it's going in the better direction. There's much reason to believe that humans are indeed pretty good, when it doesn't make them harm. The values of ours have changed all the time to acknowledge more and more as valuable, but we have an ability to think of others as outsiders, when it's in our advantage. Both of these are a strength to us I think, but when we have thought of someone as an outsider, it takes some time to come to think of it some other way, but there's evidence that when it's no longer in our great advantage to think of them as outsiders (outside the moral demands, at least partly) it often gradually changes. And I think it's because of our tendency to think ethically.

Think of for example racism. When we are living with only people similar looking to us, and don't know of others, it's probably beneficial to be cautious of people that look different than you. And if it came to be that they're hostile, it's beneficial for us to think of them as outsiders so that our ethics don't get in the way of us winning the fight. Or think of women, there was a reason for the woman to stay at home watching children, as many of the work that needed to be done outside the house needed strength, the one thing that man is better at, and the care that a woman can give to a child was greatly better than what the man could, as the babies need the milk. Also there was a reason that someone was basically a stay at home mom or dad because the household chores, like cooking took a lot more work (oven, microwave and other appliances help a lot) and there was no daycare center. It was a natural choice that it was the mom. And it, certainly at least less, is not anymore a natural choice. It can easily be either one (at least when the child is not a newborn, as milk is still beneficial). And it is not beneficial to us to think of different looking people as outsiders either, as we're indeed living with many different looking people, sharing a society with them, now. But the ethic thinking takes time to change.

And it certainly was very beneficial for us to domesticate animals and eat them. You can't grow crops anywhere but you can grow cattle pretty much anywhere. And they give you high calorie food, which is efficient. Nowadays however I would argue that it no longer is beneficial to us, as a whole (it certainly is for farmers), as plant food actually is healthier to us and we no longer really need to eat them. We can transport our food from further more easily if we can't grow it near us and we can store food easily with a fridge (it certainly was a nice bonus that the cow or a pig would store the meat automatically for when we needed it, when food was scarce, as we could kill it when we wanted). And I would argue thus is why veganism and vegetarianism has slowly risen their heads as viable ethical takes. And I think they're going to get more and more popular as time goes. However I can only hope that it's soon enough, as we don't really know in how bad shape exactly is the environment already and some scientists think that we're already losing the game. And a problem is that the nations that are getting wealthier, like China and India has actually started to take on more of a western diet (eating more meat, which became possible because they got richer) while westerns have become aware of the ethical issue.

I don't really know though, that's my "theory".

[–]A_PlantPerson 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Secondly, the arguments proposed against animals could be extended to eating plants and their potential offspring if you assume plants suffer too. I realize the idea of a plant suffering seems immediately silly, but it should be relevant to the discussion and I doubt it can be completely disproven considering that suffering is merely a systemic response to negative conditions. Plants do bend toward the light, so they do have survival "instincts" and that freshly cut grass smell is a chemical first aid response.

I think you are lead astray by the concept of suffering as that is inevitably linked to a neural network. However I think you are on the right track with "potential offspring". I guess the term that describes that perfectly is fitness (in the evolutionary biology sense). Every reaction of plants to their environment you described ultimately exists because it increases fitness. However, that's where this train of thought runs into a brick wall, because lowering an individuals fitness isn't neccecarily unethical.

[–]Greenmushroom23 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

This is my fav series on YouTube. I watch 3 eps every morning while I work out

[–]KungFuSnafu 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (14子コメント)

Is this the CPG Grey guy?

[–]Liquidska 15 ポイント16 ポイント  (0子コメント)

No but Hank Green makes similar educational type content. This is part of his series on philosophy.

[–]lukaas33 8 ポイント9 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I don't think the CPG Grey guy can be filmed

[–]Anvil_Connect 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (9子コメント)

Hank and his brother John are fucking awesome people. Hank is a personal hero of mine. He conducts his life with compassion, intelligence, passion, and a sense of community and togetherness.

[–]knotallmen 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (8子コメント)

I didn't like how they described Carter, and their views on economics in certain specifics, but it has been a long time since I watched their history series so I cannot remember specifics.

[–]Anvil_Connect 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (7子コメント)

Fair enough. Heh, I aspire to have so few valid criticisms after so long in the limelight.

[–]sam__izdat 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (6子コメント)

there's tons of criticisms

most of the videos they release have egregious errors, which are never corrected (I don't know enough about singer and the other guy to say if this is the case here)

they usually make really poor introductions to topics because they distort them so badly, while omitting critically important information -- at least on the history/politics/philosophy videos

[–]sudden_potato[S] 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Yeah, but this video seemed OK. Unless there are some errors I didn't pick up myself.

[–]Anvil_Connect 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (4子コメント)

I hear these kinds of objections off and on, but no one gives me specifics. They just talk in broad strokes and don't back up their complaints with examples.

Are you going to break the trend?

[–]sam__izdat 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (3子コメント)

I've talked about it in the last few videos linked here.

Basically, more often than not, it's handwavy bullshit that gets the basic facts wrong or badly misinterpreted. These atrocious mistakes, to my knowledge, are never even followed up with corrections.

A few examples are:

  • boldly stating that Locke's contractarianism rules out slavery when, in fact, Two Treatises directly justified/advocated slavery

  • misunderstanding the core definition of socialism in their videos on socialism (productive relationships, not distributive ones)

  • describing anarchism as primitivism/anti-statism in the "rethinking civilization" videos (the anarchist movement was a major branch of the socialist movement, focused on changing the power systems in industrial society, rather than running the hell away from it; anti-statism is also not its central component)

If you're gonna teach material with flashy, confident-sounding infotainment, maybe you should understand the material first.

[–]Anvil_Connect 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (2子コメント)

I appreciate the specifics.

In regards to Locke's contractarianism, do those Two Treatises make exceptions to his original concept of contractarianism in order to justify slavery, or is it an argument as to why his original concept justifies slavery?

[–]sam__izdat 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I'm not sure what Locke based his justifications on – not an expert. But the way they presented the topic, they made it sound like Locke was making an argument against slavery, which would be somehow impossible under his contractarian framework. Locke apparently did not agree with that at all, since he argued in favor of slavery after laying out the whole contractarian thing.

There's more discussion on this here.

[–]Mitouson007 5 ポイント6 ポイント  (17子コメント)

I have to admit from the get go. I typically don't think of my actions in a philosophical way. I find that when I do there are far to many obsurdities to count. What I mean is this; in the context of the video, I often don't think about my usage of animals or my complacency in a system that does. But if I weighed all my decisions around a philosophy of "cause no harm" I would swiftly go insane. In my estimation no choice, no matter how small or benign, is without consequences. Every choice, even the choice to do nothing carries with it untold ramifications. I am strongly for not causing suffering, still suffering is part of life. Without the copacity to feel pain we would never be able to feel the hurt we inflict.

There is no way to insulate against all suffering. To try to accomplish that would be to try and stay 20 forever simply because it was when you felt the best.

[–]necius 40 ポイント41 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I've never found this to be a satisfying perspective. I agree with you that we need to accept that, no matter what we do, we will cause some suffering, but that doesn't mean that the suffering we cause shouldn't be a factor in our choices. I think that what matters is that we focus our efforts on the choices that have, among the available options, the biggest ranges in potential to cause suffering.

Let's look at a couple of examples for which the conclusions should be uncontroversial (and overly simplistic):

  • I want to do some exercise. I have the option to do some skipping or go for a jog. Both of those will cause some suffering (mostly to me, because I'm quite unfit) but the difference in suffering is quite small, so there isn't much of an ethical dimension to the question.

  • I enjoy beating people up. I have the option of either playing Mortal Kombat, or walking down the street and beating up a random stranger. The disparity in suffering between the two options is large, so the ethical dimension of this question is significant.

When we make decisions, like the ones above, we don't necessarily always have to think of the ethical dimensions. In the first example, it's perfectly acceptable to ignore the effect of suffering in the decision making process entirely, because there's not much disparity between the options, whereas in the second one the effect of suffering becomes the dominant factor.

So that leads to our treatment of animals, in particular, the raising of animals for food (which constitutes the majority of the suffering that humans cause to animals).

  • If I'm starving, and the only food source is a (currently) live pig, there isn't much disparity in suffering between my choices (starving, or eating the pig), so the consideration of suffering isn't a major factor in my decision.

  • If I'm making a curry, and I have to decide whether to put in zucchini or eggplant, there is little disparity in suffering between the two, so suffering isn't a major factor in my decision.

  • If I go out for a meal, and have the option between a typical vegan meal and a typical non-vegetarian meal, there is a large disparity in the suffering between the two, so the suffering should be a major factor in my decision.

In reality, most of our choices have more than two options, but, with a bit of understanding, it's usually intuitively clear which of our options have low disparities in suffering and which have high disparities.

tl;dr: It's not necessarily the amount of suffering that we cause in our choices that is important, it's the disparity between the suffering in the choice we made compared to the choice that had the least suffering.

edit: changed clunky phrasing

[–]FairBlamer 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I think the method you have outlined is intriguing and offers a helpful framework for some of the decisions we make in our everyday lives...

In reality, most of our choices have more than two options, but, with a bit of understanding, it's usually intuitively clear which of our options have low disparities in suffering and which have high disparities.

...but, as illustrated in the above quote, I also think that you have underplayed the layers of complexity associated with most decision choices and, as a result, have underestimated the difficulty of employing this method accurately in most scenarios.

/u/TrippyIII provides a fantastic example that we can all relate to:

You're writing this from your computer or phone, likely some parts of that machine or the entire machine was made in China. Likely, some people have to suffer greatly to create those machines as I'm sure you know. Therefore buying or using these machines is roughly responsible for an immense amount of suffering and even death. Not buying and using these machines is better.

Now you can say that the machines will be produced by these companies mistreating people, whether you buy and use the machines or not. But same goes for animal farms. Animals will die whether you buy and eat them or not. You can choose to lower the demand of meat by not consuming it so that less of it will be produced in the long run, but you could do the same with your computer and reduce the demand which will reduce the suffering of the people producing these machines. The question is: why aren't you doing that? If being internally consistent is what matters (as the video suggests), then all of us on this website are IMMENSELY internally inconsistent.

I gave a concrete example of computers and phones, but really, a lot of infrastructure you enjoy is made from materials mined in countries where people slave away in mines. A lot of things you use in your daily life is made with different chemicals produced by people which suffer greatly because of the dangers within the production process. Many services that are provided to you daily are being performed or maintained by people in third-world country that live on a wage that can't even feed them.

So believe it or not, you actually cause a lot of suffering just by debating this. You definitely don't need it, not necessary for survival. So why do it?

[–]ziltiod94 50 ポイント51 ポイント  (1子コメント)

There is no way to insulate against all suffering

Why does that matter? You are using an All-or-Nothing argument. You are saying, "if I can't reduce all suffering, then I should not have to attempt to minimize suffering."

This doesn't hold because it would be completely inconsistent with any moral framework. You make simple actions such as not hitting someone over with your car because it is immoral, even if it would save you time (along with legal and financial reasons).

To try to accomplish that would be to try and stay 20 forever simply because it was when you felt the best.

You pick an easy example that is impossible to achieve and fits your framework of not having to reduce suffering because we can't reduce all suffering.

But with your logic, you wouldn't have to help an injured person who is suffering, because you can't stop all suffering. It is completely illogical, and inconsistent with any philosophical framework. You have some form of a framework, even if subconsciously, that guides your life.

Your argument is most likely ignoring the extremely easy options to minimize suffering in this world, specifically towards animals, that you aren't taking advantage. The market for plant-based foods and cosmetics that aren't tested on animals is in the billions of dollars: the market is huge. The chances that you (someone reading this post who doesn't think they can could be vegan) don't have access to them is extremely low.

Your framework is set up for constant failure. But with a framework that says "minimize the suffering you cause or allow to happen," it is easy to see that we don't worry about feeling 20 forever, but aim to feel the best at ever age, so that we can live a long, good life.

[–]FairBlamer 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (0子コメント)

There is no way to insulate against all suffering

Why does that matter? You are using an All-or-Nothing argument. You are saying, "if I can't reduce all suffering, then I should not have to attempt to minimize suffering."

I don't think /u/Mitouson007 is saying that at all.

A more honest interpretation of /u/Mitouson007's comment is to view it less as an argument for a position, and more as a reaction to a problem.

/u/Mitouson007 feels totally incapable of charting the innumerable consequences of even the smallest choices, let alone weighing them on moral grounds, and therefore recognizes the relative insignificance of many of those decisions insofar as they should have any meaningful impact on the world, much less a morally righteous impact at that. The overall comment is well summarized here:

I am strongly for not causing suffering, still suffering is part of life.

This is a humbling sentiment, rather than a defeatist one.

[–]meatbased5nevah 22 ポイント23 ポイント  (9子コメント)

If I weighed all my decisions around a philosophy of "cause no harm" I would swiftly go insane

That's not practical, and is not is what being proposed. The case being made is just that you should weigh the expected value caused by certain actions.

Buying a roast chicken at the grocery store is roughly responsible for the death of one animal and the suffering associated with raising them. Eating a vegetarian option is better, but no one can honestly claim that doing so "insulates against all suffering".

The idea that it's impossible to cause zero harm is true, but as they say, don't let perfect be the enemy of good.

[–]TrippyIII 6 ポイント7 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Buying a roast chicken at the grocery store is roughly responsible for the death of one animal and the suffering associated with raising them. Eating a vegetarian option is better, but no one can honestly claim that doing so "insulates against all suffering".

You're writing this from your computer or phone, likely some parts of that machine or the entire machine was made in China. Likely, some people have to suffer greatly to create those machines as I'm sure you know. Therefore buying or using these machines is roughly responsible for an immense amount of suffering and even death. Not buying and using these machines is better.

Now you can say that the machines will be produced by these companies mistreating people, whether you buy and use the machines or not. But same goes for animal farms. Animals will die whether you buy and eat them or not. You can choose to lower the demand of meat by not consuming it so that less of it will be produced in the long run, but you could do the same with your computer and reduce the demand which will reduce the suffering of the people producing these machines. The question is: why aren't you doing that? If being internally consistent is what matters (as the video suggests), then all of us on this website are IMMENSELY internally inconsistent.

I gave a concrete example of computers and phones, but really, a lot of infrastructure you enjoy is made from materials mined in countries where people slave away in mines. A lot of things you use in your daily life is made with different chemicals produced by people which suffer greatly because of the dangers within the production process. Many services that are provided to you daily are being performed or maintained by people in third-world country that live on a wage that can't even feed them.

So believe it or not, you actually cause a lot of suffering just by debating this. You definitely don't need it, not necessary for survival. So why do it?

[–]mediumheightgiraffe 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (1子コメント)

Think then perhaps of the long term effects consuming meat will have on you and the people around you. The meat industry is extremely detrimental to our environment, and at the end of the day people will pay the price.

Maybe the 'suffering is part of life' sentiment won't hold up if you're the one suffering in the end.

[–]ArimusPrime 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I find it both good and bad to relate morality to how humans will end. I think its selfish to measure choices based on the limits of my (or my race's) existence. So what if humans end? Life will go on and maybe even do better. But trying to prevent our own end is also a good starting point for a better morality. As you said the less we value other life forms the harder we will make it for ourselves. So there is some good from being selfish. In the end we have to critically consider choices that seem normal. People are made to feel happy when eating meat without realising some poor, thinking, breathing, living animal has to give up its life so you can indulge in a few seconds of pleasure. While vegetables don't care of you eat them, in fact many vegetarian food sources benefit from being eaten. There is no ethical beleif that accepts eating meat as good unless you will literally die unless you eat.

[–]Koloradio 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (2子コメント)

It's worth remembering that no domestic species is natural. Most cattle are descended from the now extinct aurochs, pigs were domesticated from wild boars, dogs from wolves. While dogs may not live the free and wild life of the wolf, they're doing much better in evolutionary terms (diversity, population size, reproduction). Domestication is, essentially, a wild species losing its 'freedom' in exchange for a supply of food, protection from predators, and guaranteed reproduction (well, for the studs anyway). I bring this up because it touches on a little considered consequence of treating humans and non-human animal's equivalently: if everyone in the world agreed that it was wrong to eat meat, domestic animals would likely die out, or worse, be released to wreak havoc on natural landscapes.

There's still an argument to made for reducing animal suffering, ending factory farms/feedlots, etc. but it's worth thinking about the fact that the violation of an individual animal's interests (say, not being eaten) was the reason that species came about, the reason domestic animals have been so successful, and is necessary for the continuation of the species.

[–]sudden_potato[S] 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

t the violation of an individual animal's interests (say, not being eaten) was the reason that species came about, the reason domestic animals have been so successful, and is necessary for the continuation of the species.

You make an interesting point. But I'd ask, why does the continuation of a species matter? Does it really matter that much?

I'd argue no. An individual being in the species of pig doesn't care about the abstract notion of the continuation of her species. She cares about not suffering, and having an enjoyable life.

I don't think it is good to bring a being into existence if we know they are going to have bad lives. If that means the pig species dwindles and maybe even is eradicated (except for some in sanctuaries etc), I don't see the big issue.

[–]necius 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Over the past century or so, westerners have come to view species extinction as a fundamentally bad thing. This shift in perception is largely a good thing, but I think many people don't really understand why species extinction is bad.

A species, unlike an individual, doesn't have wants or needs; it doesn't have a consciousness. When we talk about things going well or badly for a species, that doesn't really mean anything in a concrete sense, it just means that conditions favour increased numbers of individuals of a species, but it's the individuals who matter.

So why is species extinction a problem if a species isn't a thing for whom circumstances can go well or badly? The short answer is biodiversity. Increased biodiversity is good for the environment (again, this is a shorthand) and, importantly, it is good for the individuals (both human and non-human animals) who live in that environment, both present and future.

Let's talk about cows, because they make the clearest point. Would the extinction of cows be bad for biodiversity? The answer, as I'm sure most ecologists would agree, is an emphatic no. Cows raised for food are a huge burden on the environment, and a key driver of the extinction of species in a range of environments. The species Bos Taurus has no rights to continue existing (because no species has a right to continue existing), only individuals of that species can have rights. Furthermore, the continued existence of the species, at least on anything approaching the scale on which they are farmed, is detrimental to other species (and thus biodiversity), individual animals of other species (who experience habitat loss and competition from grazing and growing crops for feed), and the individual cows who are exploited. Ending feedlots, while not simultaneously drastically cutting down on beef production, would actually worsen the impact on biodiversity.

[–]MacAdler 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (4子コメント)

What about the ability, or potentiality, to use language? Whenever I think about this type of differences between humans and non-human animals, I always end up with language as the main difference, and what put us in a different category. The ability to create and use language is what serves as a Moral excuse.

Because these other animals are unable to communicate effectively using a complex, organized, and discernible form of communication, they are not to be hold under the same considerations that humans are. And yes, there are humans that speak other languages, and there are some that can't even speak; but they are all humans.

This is the reason why I wouldn't eat my cat or dog. After living together with a cat or a dog, you a way of communication that you don't have with the pig that became bacon, or the cow that became your burger.

Now, should we mistreat animals? No, I don't think so.

Should we continue to eat them? I think that in order for our specie to survive on the long term here on Earth, and to be able to successfully get out of Earth and colonize the system, we're going to have to change the way we produce food. Not so much because of the moral dilemma that it presents, but because it is an unsustainable situation for us as a whole.

[–]Omnibeneviolent 3 ポイント4 ポイント  (0子コメント)

If it is acceptable to kill and eat other beings based on an inability to use language, then why is it not acceptable to kill human beings without this ability?

You have said that after living with a cat or dog, you develop a communication -- one could even say that a rudimentary language emerges. It is clear that many nonhuman animals have the potential to learn such a language, including pigs. Why is it acceptable to not eat your cat, but it is acceptable to kill and eat a pig when both have similar "potentialities?"

[–]necius 1 ポイント2 ポイント  (0子コメント)

And yes, there are humans that speak other languages, and there are some that can't even speak; but they are all humans.

That's speciesism. If you use a specific characteristic as the factor that determines value, then only individuals with that characteristic should be assigned value. The fact that you're willing to extend value to humans without language indicates that there's more going on here.

[–]elc13 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Mentally retarded humans can't create language.

[–]TheMetaphorer 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Meat eating is incredibly bad for the environment and unsustainable. Humanity will eventually come to a point where we must stop eating meat, or face mass starvation or even extinction.

[–]abelkiller5 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

We could create rabbit sanctuaries to maximize joy.

[–]Justin_Scheibel 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I am glad that this conversation is happening because it demonstrates that the pervasive social ignorance of it is unravelling due to the persistent efforts of animal rights activists, environmentalists and deep ecologists, but it quite frankly infuriates me to read the mostly uninformed views of individuals against and for animal rights, using dated, fragile arguments and a severe deficit of research in animal cognition and aptitudes due to underfunding and inherent bias in researchers. I feel like all I can do is wait for the genocide of the planet to end one way or another and just stand by my ethics to protect other species as valuable intrinsically and not extrinsically while surpressing anthropocentricst ideology. I would like to respond critically to views presented here, but it is deeply depressing, so I will just stick to stating my position so that there is no consensus.

A bit of a manifesto:

I hold that the ecosystem is more intrinsically valuable than humanity is in itself.

I hold that nonhuman animals are not justifiable as mere means nor is a lopsided interaction with nonhumans in which humans obtain more well-being than the nonhuman permissible

I hold that most human interactions are not bidirectional with the human being adopting communication modes of the nonhuman in order to balance dialogue; rather most interactions are self-flatteringly unidirection with the imposition of human communication modes. This means that some pet relations are indeed morally permissible insofar as interaction is balanced and behavior not stifled by control, but many are immoral.

I hold that, in lieu of nonhuman animals deserving not only dignity and well-being in equal measure to their actual capacities (as demonstrated by cognitive ethology and neuroscience and not merely speculated as convenient by detractors), but the very right to live and actualize their cognitive modes and behaviors, to self-actualize their capacities and not merely be controlled with insideous conditioning that inhibits cognitive growth, that our treatment of other species is the gravest violation of morality in human history, persistent for several millenia, and that nothing we have done to each other even compares.

I hold that all species deserve this cognitive liberty and that classical and operant conditioning modes along with selective breeding shape the cognitive makeup and tendencies of individuals to serve purely human ends, and that much cognitive/psychological diversity in species is destroyed this way. It is equivalent to selectively breeding human slaves for docility, obedience and lack of stochastic behaviors that lead to cognitive development. It therefore should be illegal and that all human-nonhuman interactions should be treated as evolving dialogue with different rhetorical moves and communicative gestures and that human beings should not be permitted to limit, restrict or diminish the communicative abilities of nonhumans. This include such things as removing dog's vocal cords or severe punitive measures for psychologically healthy horse behaviors that are traditionally seen as "vices".

All individual members of a species are valuable in themselves as they are, indeed, individuals and not merely extensions of a kind or class that can be generalized. All nonhuman animals are persons with rich conscious lives and self-interests, and should be treated as such informally and in formal law.

Individual members of a species exercise choice and decision, and while this is not in the same modes as human beings, the sponteneity and stochasticisty of action constitutes free will in a salient moral sense. It is thus that we must extend to nonhumans protections from inhibiting their behaviors and inclinations so as to allow them freedom of choice and action. To this end as well, the idea of deliberative choice is not requisite for a salient moral weight of choice in individual members of a species.

I hold that zoophilic relaitions are morally permissible and that psychological disgust with this idea is completely irrational and does not constitute a valid ethics.

I hold that it is right that a human life is equal in value to that of a nonhuman such that if one is to choose between a human and nonhuman life to save, one may choose either without a failure of ethics.

I hold that the meat industry should be completely disassembled, and that human beings need to change their eating habits to be sustainable and ethical. The system is cruel and destructive, and not only does it horrifically mistreat its foodstock species it is also causing the endangerment of other species, such as the coyote, and other modes of species being such as the feral horse and anything that competes with cattle ranchers and factory farms for land usage. It is as evil as anything we do can be.

[–]herbw 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Agree. Animal and human cognitions most all share recognitions capabilities which are very, very similar, tho not physiologically anything but analogous to humans, except for the great apes, technically.

We are much more alike the animals, because we SHARE the same recognitions capabilities, tho modified according to each species' survival needs.

Birds are LOTS faster than we, mentally, because they must make 10-20 Msec motor/flight changes while flying and we're lucky to get a real motor decision done by 200-300 Msec.!! Thus their brains are about 40-50 times faster than ours. So who has the superior clock speed of brain?

check this article regarding ants and bees & their solutions to traveling salesman problems; and how we can communicate with many animals.

https://jochesh00.wordpress.com/2014/06/11/complex-systems-boundary-events-and-hierarchies/

[–]andreslucero 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

I think "might makes right" is justifiable by production potential. A human being is capable of producing, creating and innovating more than any animal could ever hope to and so, it would be inconvenient to limit their potential (slavery) or outright cutting it by eating them. Production also includes emotional production, since the chicken you ate has no emotional impact on your life and will never do so (unless you had him as a pet, then you probably wouldn't kill it for consumption) but a kitten would produce an emotional attachment that gives it a higher status in our hierarchy, even though emotional attachment can't translate into an economic sense.

In short, bloody cats tricking us to not eat them. Anyways, that's my five minute justification.

[–]Joilol 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

But the difference is on the why we kill them. We frown upon much more on killing or harming for fun or because you are crazy, the other is doing it with a sensible reason: food, some economic gain...

[–]sudden_potato[S] 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

the other is doing it with a sensible reason: food

But eating animal products is unnecessary for health or survival. So I don't think that is a "sensible" reason. There's not enough justification.

[–]MetaParser 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

The only problem is the abuses. Animals being eaten is part of the natural cycle, no problem with that... Some people says you can live without meat so you should... Sorry but I need a bit of meat at some point or I go crazy, it's just not the same thing (and meat is about 5% of my ingredients). Respecting animals is ok but overwriting reality because you get emotional over puppies, NOPE. Treating animals like human being is ridiculous, as are robot rights.