Hopefully, we'll begin to see sense and give up killing animals for food or fun. — TheMadFool
Because they feel pain and suffering. And we should not cause needless pain and suffering to another living being. But to be more clear, why do you eat animals? — chatterbears
Being factually wrong is a big problem, don't you think? — chatterbears
Do you base your moral foundation on consciousness, like Sam Harris, or not? — Sapientia
Oh, I am fully aware a person can be consistent and also eat meat, but that usually leads to absurd positions or factually wrong positions. I guess that was assumed that people would not want to be factual wrong or absurd.And they can be consistent by rejecting the claim that animals feel pain — Michael
Yes I do. That I consider the well-being of sentient (conscious) living beings. What exactly is your question? — chatterbears
It's on page one. — Sapientia
I guess that was assumed that people would not want to be factual wrong or absurd. — chatterbears
I'll argue the point with them when the time comes, but that statement in and of itself leads to an absurd position. But again, you are just playing devil's advocate, I assume. What is your position? Do you eat meat, if so why?the evidence you present in favour of animals feeling (human-like) pain isn't evidence of this at all. — Michael
What is your position? Do you eat meat, if so why? — chatterbears
So, if a species level of consciousness is to a point of being incapable to feel pain or suffering (maybe similar to a plant), then I wouldn't see a problem in killing it. But generally speaking, most animals (humans included) can experience a consciousness level that contains the ability to feel pain and suffering. — chatterbears
Do you think the justification of "i like it" is valid and ethically consistent?I eat meat because I like it. — Michael
But they don't have the same level of consciousness with regards to pain and suffering, so why should one be empathic and compassionate to the same degree — Sapientia
Do you think the justification of "i like it" is valid and ethically consistent? — chatterbears
Why would I need to justify eating meat? — Michael
But when it comes to decisions that may or may not cause harm — chatterbears
What harm does eating meat cause? — Michael
People are inconsistent in many things, including yourself. It is probably the result of how our modular brain evolved.They can be arbitrary, but people can be inconsistent within their own arbitrary ethics. Which is part of the problem. — chatterbears
A severely mentally handicapped person, or a brain dead person, does not have the same level of consciousness with regards to pain and suffering than we do. But would that make it OK to kill them? — chatterbears
People are inconsistent in many things, including yourself — Harry Hindu
So, why are you changing the subject? — Sapientia
Okay, so you were playing devil's advocate?I don't. I'm not arguing that animals don't feel pain. I'm arguing that a meat-eater can "accept the 3 moral pillars while simultaneously eating animals" by rejecting the claim that animals feel pain (or at least the claim that animal pain is like human pain). — Michael
The point was there in the post. You just cherry-picked the post in making your reply. I said that the degree of consciousness should not be a measuring stick for determining what lives or dies.Yes. I was waiting for that one. But what's your point? We don't factory farm humans. They wouldn't taste as good. — Sapientia
I will admit to biting the bullet despite the fact that the green and speciesist arguments are compelling. — jastopher
If you are playing devil's advocate then why stop playing when the questions get difficult? — Harry Hindu
My point was, on what grounds does one claim that animals do not feel pain?
Or one can argue that given the different nervous system and brain structure, it's likely that whatever they feel isn't like what I feel, and so empathy is impossible. — Michael
This is why I asked you to clarify your question. You went to consciousness and I responded. Rephrase your question. — chatterbears
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