Look: — baker
You then created two hypothetical examples which had no bearing on what I said, as if they represented what I said. — Wayfarer
Humans are different to animals because they have symbolic communication, can take alternative courses of action, foresee the consequences of what they do, and act from a variety of motives.
Of course animals have a will to live, they suffer if abused, they can be unhappy or happy, they can flourish or be miserable. But that doesn't mean that the concept of 'animal rights' is meaningful.
:)My chain saw keeps quitting on me. — James Riley
So this is another individual subjective principle of our moral system. An individual decides not to get vaccinated, and when afflicted with virus, runs to the hospital and begs for help. With the assumption that he is a moral agent, and decides to go against the prevailing scientific belief that vaccination works, we have to think about whether admitting such decision within our system makes the system unstable. Well, does it?A person is offered a free vaccine. He doesn't take it. He get's sick and starts dying. He runs to the hospital and begs for help. We can sit around with our couldashouldawoulda all day long. That doesn't influence his actions. — James Riley
You missed the first line:
You are assuming too much uniformity and unanimousness for humans. — baker
if an individual decides not to get vaccinated, and when afflicted with virus, runs to the hospital and begs for help. With the assumption that he is a moral agent, and decides to go against the prevailing scientific belief that vaccination works, we have to think about whether admitting such decision within our system makes the system unstable. Well, does it? — Caldwell
With the assumption that he is a moral agent, and decides to go against the prevailing scientific belief that vaccination works, we have to think about whether admitting such decision within our system makes the system unstable. Well, does it? — Caldwell
Often we can accommodate such modalities given a small number of occurrence. Often the stability of a system is tied to the size of modalities -- or divergent actions. I believe we have in place a device that could measure it, and once a number of unacceptable divergence is reached, we are also equipped to deal with it. But should we really wait until it rocks the boat? — Caldwell
Humans are not all the same but for the purposes of determining human rights, are treated as equal for those purposes. — Wayfarer
"admitting such decision" -- should we accept an individual subjective decision - not get vaccinated -- into our system? Maybe not well chosen words by me.I certainly believe that those who refuse vaccination on purportedly conscientious grounds might have their civil freedoms curtailed, i.e. not be allowed into venues or airplanes, but there's already a thread for that debate. — Wayfarer
With the assumption that he is a moral agent, and decides to go against the prevailing scientific belief that vaccination works, we have to think about whether admitting such decision within our system makes the system unstable. Well, does it? — Caldwell
Obviously, this is not exhaustive of all the issues we could talk about vaccination. We are just touching the surface, giving cursory treatment of the subject.This is too simplistic. The fact is that sometimes, people get vaccinated and get sick from the vaccine, or get covid despite being vaccinated. — baker
But this is a facetious comment.↪Caldwell
Well, as I said, there's a thread on vaccination ethics. Suffice to say, if a deadly disease began to appear in the canine population which could be spread to humans, it would be meaningless to consult with the dogs as to whether they agree to be vaccinated or not, so the question of whether they have a right not to be vaccinated is an empty one. — Wayfarer
I feel like I'm teaching the alphabet here. — Caldwell
That's why I went back to the basics -- the will, where everyone has equal shot at getting acknowledgement. Animals can't win when we start talking about rationality. — Caldwell
Right, rights.And I feel like you're continuing to miss the point, which is about rights. You seem to be saying that animal rights can be justified on the basis that they have a will to live. Whereas, I'm arguing that rights pertain to humans, because they are rational agents, and not to animals, because they are not. Can you recognise that distinction? — Wayfarer
Since some of you have been pushing for animal rights, my response is, yes let's give them rights, but that isn't strong enough. — Caldwell
Another facetious remark. — Caldwell
What would it take to have some form of humane treatment for the animals? — Caldwell
Ever heard the Buddhist expression, 'this precious human life'? Do you know what that's about? Why human life, in particular, is so designated? — Wayfarer
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