FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > IIDB ARCHIVE: 200X-2003, PD 2007 > IIDB Philosophical Forums (PRIOR TO JUN-2003)
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 05:55 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 03-15-2002, 09:19 AM   #461
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Posts: 263
Post

Quote:
Originally posted by Mageth:
<strong>"You should be eating your vegetables anyway, young man. 3-5 servings a day, I believe."

All those poor dead vegetables! Oh, the horror!
</strong>
Did you really have to go there?
SallySmith is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:20 AM   #462
Banned
 
Join Date: May 2001
Location: LALA Land in California
Posts: 3,764
Talking

I'm going to join a convent and become celery.
Mad Kally is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:21 AM   #463
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: free
Posts: 123
Post

My this puns are crisp. But if any of them make groan, I'll Squash you.
x-member is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:23 AM   #464
Contributor
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Canada. Finally.
Posts: 10,155
Arrow

Does onion think vegetables don't feel pain? If you prick them, do they not leek?
Queen of Swords is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:32 AM   #465
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Greensboro, NC, U.S.A.
Posts: 2,597
Unhappy

Quote:
Originally posted by spin:
<strong>Jeffrey Dahmer ate human animals with what I consider the same sort of consciousness as some people eat other animals. The parallel was not disputed as being inappropriate. Some people simply didn't like being related to Jeffrey Dahmer. But all they had to do was to show that the parallel was inappropriate. Not a single person succeeded, and almost no-one tried.</strong>
Excuse me, but I did indeed raise issues with this parallel that have not been addressed at all.

Essentially, I made the point that human consciousness is specifically and materially different from non-human animal consciousness. There is no evidence of which I'm aware that supports the idea that any non-human animal can support the type of abstract reasoning necessary to develop complex ethical systems. Therefore, animals have no conception of ethics or morality and such concepts are moot when applied directly to them.

Animals have no conception of "murder" or "cannibalism". Lions don't murder gazelles. If a non-human animal were even capable of conceiving its place in the "food chain", it would still have no conception of the rightness or wrongness of any actions taken by the other animals above or below it.

Animals, therefore, lack what I would call a "right of self-determination" simply because they do not possess the ability to conceive it.

Humans, on the other hand, do possess this ability and ethical systems created by humans will therefore acknowledge it.

In other words, there are specific and material differences between human and non-human animals that allow us to make ethical differentiation between the two. These differentiations are obviously not based on preference, or desire, nor are they "arbitrary" as you like to claim. They are matters of objective fact and therefore cannot be other than as they are.

Speaking of objective fact, I'm going to respond to your other post to me as well.

Quote:
Originally posted by spin:
<strong>Bill, I think you are simply wrong and should attempt to understand what the aim of this contract theory was. The aim in another century was to argue a defence for aiding the most people possible. It was a more barbaric era and people needed to be given moral support. Here we are in a later century and we find PB attempting to abuse it (ie to go against the logic of including the many). It is no longer appropriate because our moral situation has changed, I think, for the better: we no longer have public executions for the entertainment of the masses; we no longer accept slavery; and so on. PB is making a sham out of the original concept. I don't think you can take it out of its context and use it meaningfully unless you attempt to enter into the spirit of its development. You don't, you seem to want to use it in the abstract and ignore the current morality problems which should be considered, which are different from the original developments.</strong>
Here it is also a matter of objective fact that you are wrong.

1) Read Hobbes, Locke, & Rousseau. You will find no mention of animals. You will find a great deal of mention of Man and his rational facilities. You will find mention of what a "contract" is and what it isn't. You will find mention of how "rights" are explicitly formalized and guaranteed via contract and not by any other method. You will see that their true aim was to develop an ethical/political system in which individual citizens (that would be humans) could be ensured of the protection of their freedoms without having to surrender to tyranny.

2) Read Rawls, Gauthier and their critics. You will find them defending essentially the same ideas that Hobbes, Locke, & Rousseau developed. Again, non-human animals are not part of the construct. In fact, one of the major criticisms of contractarian ethics is that it excludes those who are unable to enter into contracts. I suppose that might even include non-human animals.

The point, of course, is that PB and I are not distorting this theory. It explicitly excludes, and was designed to exclude, those who are unable to contract. Non-human animals are unable to enter into contracts and are thus excluded from this theory.

Your desire to somehow expand the theory to cover animals can only be understood as a criticism or attack upon the theory. In no way does your line of thinking represent contractarian ethics.

The very name illustrates your error: Contractarian Ethics. Non-human animals cannot enter into contracts. They lack the necessary reasoning abilities. They are therefore, by design, excluded.

Your claim that PB & I are somehow distorting this theory is therefore objectively disproven. Q.E.D.

Now, you can certainly attack contractarian ethics as inappropriate to the issue under discussion, but to do so you would have to reveal your own justification or foundation for whatever ethical system you believe is best. We have repeatedly asked you to do so and have been met with staunch silence.

Do you not understand the request? Do you not think it appropriate? Are you not interested in explaining to the non-vegetarians here exactly why eating meat is wrong? So far, you've failed to do this. Can we expect anything different in your next response?

[ March 15, 2002: Message edited by: Bill Snedden ]</p>
Bill Snedden is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:36 AM   #466
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Deep in the heart of mother-lovin' Texas
Posts: 29,689
Talking

I haven't pricked any, but I've gourd a few, sqashed one or two, and once collard a tomato who owed me some greens.
Mageth is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:40 AM   #467
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: .
Posts: 1,653
Post

Stomping at the Savoy (cabbage)?
bonduca is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:40 AM   #468
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Greensboro, NC, U.S.A.
Posts: 2,597
Post

Quote:
Originally posted by SallySmith:
<strong>Edited to ask for help - don't laugh - how do I make the html showing here go away?</strong>
Sally -

If you will edit the post, you will see that the first line ("Yes, perhaps...) has two of the QB operators in front of it. Deleting one will solve half of your problem.

Immediately after that same line is a /QB operator. If you'll notice, there's another one of these after the second line ("...at debating"). The first one (after that first line) is unnecessary. If you delete it, you'll have solved the other half of your problem.

Bill
Bill Snedden is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:42 AM   #469
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Posts: 263
Post

Thank you kindly.
SallySmith is offline  
Old 03-15-2002, 09:48 AM   #470
Contributor
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Canada. Finally.
Posts: 10,155
Talking

So where's spin(ach)?
Queen of Swords is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 03:07 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.