Only by being inconsistent. — NKBJ
And what intellectual capacity does an infant possess that you think a pig doesn't? — NKBJ
Are you really making an equivalence between the severely autistic or mentally disabled and chickens? — Sapientia
It seems that we justify the eating of vegetables based upon the fact that squash lacks consciousness, — Hanover
Once again, if it is that intelligence is the determinant for moral worth, then yes, Man can eat chickens all day, but as I brought up, this also means that it is morally justifiable on the same premises that one that is more intelligent than us can and ought to eat us as food. — Buxtebuddha
can and ought to eat us as food
Sap wasn't saying that X can eat Y if X is more intelligent than Y. He seemed to be saying that X can eat Y if Y isn't sufficiently intelligent. — Michael
A cow isn't sufficiently intelligent, and so we can eat it. We are sufficiently intelligent, and so a much more intelligent species cannot eat us. — Michael
I mean, sure, I'm more intelligent than a pig, but such a fact says nothing of whether I ought or ought not eat said pig. — Buxtebuddha
Seems to me that Sappy has defined this into being without providing anything that supports it. — Buxtebuddha
Yes, because it is clear that some humans have the same capacity for thought as other animals. Is this the bullet I was supposed to bite? Yet, it’s just a fact. Some humans are not capable of a higher intellectual thought, and therefore would be on the same level (intelligence wise) as a chicken/pig/cow.
So again, are you going to bite the bullet on your inconsistent position? Stating that “advanced intelligence capacity” is not present in chickens, therefore we can kill them, should also follow that we can kill someone humans who also don’t have “advanced intelligence capacity “. Otherwise, you’d be contradicting yourself and would have an inconsistent position within your own subjective ethics. And as I said before, consistency matters, otherwise you’d have arbitrary lines drawn that are based on nothing other than what you feel is right or wrong. — chatterbears
I don't think it's right to say that he's defined it into being. At the very least it describes most people's actual moral decisions. I'm OK with eating pigs but I'm not OK with eating humans. I can't put this down to simple speciesism as I can imagine not being OK with eating some intelligent alien. So how do I explain the difference? The intelligence of the species certainly seems like the most obvious distinction. — Michael
And in hindsight, perhaps I shouldn't have humoured you when you told me to name the trait, as if there were only a single reason why it's considered acceptable to farm chickens, but not humans. If not intellectual capacity, at least in the case of those humans who it is claimed have an intellectual capacity of an equivalent level to that of a chicken, then it must be some other reason, or some additional reason or reasons. — Sapientia
I'm OK with eating pigs but I'm not OK with eating humans. I can't put this down to simple speciesism as I can imagine not being OK with eating some intelligent alien. So how do I explain the difference? The intelligence of the species certainly seems like the most obvious distinction. — Michael
Yes, but I've been also understanding you to be agreeing with him: — NKBJ
So, again, I put to you the question, what marker of intelligence do all humans possess that no cow possesses?
Yes, at least I'm giving it some thought instead of jumping straight for the conclusion they're pushing me towards, like a lamb to the slaughter. — Sapientia
Well, if there were a human who had the same level of intelligence as a chicken, who looked and acted just like a chicken, had the same kind of flesh as a chicken, and was to all intents and purposes treated just like a chicken on a farm, then I would have no qualms with eating a human burger made from this human. — Sapientia
So how can you claim that there is a significant difference if you don't know what it is? — NKBJ
Or are you admitting to a mostly unexplored and possibly just biased gut feeling about the whole thing?
You haven't shown that it's the latter. — Sapientia
I was talking about humans in general. But one difference is that a pig won't develop the intellectual faculties of an adult human within its lifetime. — Sapientia
Generally, yes. But not all humans are. Which means, if merely intelligence is your marker, that those humans would be fair game to torture and/or kill. — NKBJ
I'm only saying that I am OK with eating pigs but not humans, and that the difference in intelligence of these species seems to be the trait that best explains why I feel the way I do. — Michael
That sounds contradictory to me.
Your first sentence seems to be claiming that intelligence is not the marker that makes killing permissible.
Your second sentence seems to be claiming that intelligence is the best marker you can think of that makes killing permissible.
If not, can you please clarify it for me? — NKBJ
Well, if there were a human who had the same level of intelligence as a chicken, who looked and acted just like a chicken, had the same kind of flesh as a chicken, and was to all intents and purposes treated just like a chicken on a farm, then I would have no qualms with eating a human burger made from this human. So yes, it's fine to eat both humans and chickens under the right circumstances. — Sapientia
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