The discussion was about the ethics of treating humans better than animals. — andrewk
You came back with a reason for treating humans better than animals that had nothing to do with ethics. — andrewk
I think that you ought not casually and opportunistically use other free agents just because you can, because that's not what heroes do, that's what villains do. — Wosret
You serious don't know? You can't tell the difference? At a convenient time like this, and probably others I'm sure the difference seems vague, but you know that it isn't. — Wosret
Having anti-heroes, strubbled heroes, heroes with vices, or that are "just human" just show that all fall short of the goal, but that doesn't mean that there isn't one. Don't pretend that there's not such thing as better or worse, good and evil. — Wosret
I talk about how things actually are. You talk about what you wish them to be. — apokrisis
Your continuing objection to darthbarracuda's claim that "speciesism is wrong" seems to basically be "no, because the definition of morality is what a group considers right/wrong and currently most people don't consider speciesism wrong so you're wrong by definition". — zookeeper
It seems to me that, to avoid inconsistency, an argument for giving all humans greater consideration than all animals either has to just declare as axiom that species is what matters (or some other arbitrary factor, like 'potential personhood', which is an issue sometimes raised by religious people that feel embarrassed to explain their human-preference just by 'God said so'), whether for religious reasons or out of feisty Williamsesque defiance, or accept that the approach implies lesser consideration for humans with whom we share fewer ancestors. But that may just be my lack of imagination about the types of arguments that can be offered. I'd certainly be interested to hear of possible alternatives. — andrewk
You tell me. Is the protection of the poor based on a reasoned analysis of the comparative value of individual lives? — Wayfarer
Why can't the good be unattainable? Why must we be able to attain the good? Why must the good be constrained to be compatible with our own limitations? — darthbarracuda
For me, and this may be just me, the domain of ethics seems to be delineated by the simple consideration that it is about making decisions that I expect to have an impact on the feelings of other beings that I believe to be sentient. — andrewk
I'm not seeing a problem with coming up with rational arguments for why human societies ought to protect their poor. — Apokrisis
we have good reason to believe that animals don't suffer from existential dread, for instance.
And then morality in general has no transcendent or Platonic basis. It is simply the wisdom by which human societies live. So it could only be a group thing.
And being naturalistic in that fashion, it would be no surprise if morality evolves in step with lifestyle evolution. — Apokrisis
Philosophers and humanists are interested in what has been called, in 20th-century continental philosophy, the human condition, that is, a sense of uneasiness that human beings may feel about their own existence and the reality that confronts them (as in the case of modernity with all its changes in the proximate environment of humans and corresponding changes in their modes of existence). Scientists are more interested in human nature. If they discover that human nature doesn’t exist and human beings are, like cells, merely parts of a bigger aggregate, to whose survival they contribute, and all they feel and think is just a matter of illusion (a sort of Matrix scenario), then, as far as science is concerned, that’s it, and science should go on investigating humans by considering this new fact about their nature.
It's hard to know how to answer questions like that. 'Why' questions are so hard to pin down and determine exactly what would constitute a satisfactory response. Why does one care about anything? Caring is an emotion and in my view emotions are fundamental - the starting point for all mental activity. I reject most 'ism' and 'ist' labels but meta-ethically I'm pretty comfortable about accepting the label 'Emotivist'.Why do you care about the feelings of others though? — Πετροκότσυφας
In fact I said DC was wrong in claiming that human suffering and animal suffering ought to be presumed to be equal as we have good reason to believe that animals don't suffer from existential dread, for instance. — apokrisis
And then morality in general has no transcendent or Platonic basis. It is simply the wisdom by which human societies live. So it could only be a group thing.
And being naturalistic in that fashion, it would be no surprise if morality evolves in step with lifestyle evolution. So what we do currently, or previously, can be examined in terms of why it worked - and by definition it has worked because here we are. However we are free to make a new kind of sense of the world, as encoded by our new moral codes.
But then, the anthropological examination of what has worked does throw up general and obvious "rules" - such as the ones that establish trade-offs between competitive and cooperative behaviours in any social group. — apokrisis
Agreed, it doesn't necessarily have any implications for non-human animals. It depends on what reason is given for why humans should be treated equally to one another.when we say "all humans ought be treated equally" we don't need to say anything about non-human animals. — Michael
I don't think there is a natural warrant for it. It seems natural to us, but it is a cultural standard, ultimately grounded in Christian ethical theory. — Wayfarer
Right - there's the rub. Humans are differentiated by 'existential dread' - which is precisely a consequence of self-awareness and the sense of separateness from nature that humans have but that animals do not. Much of what goes under the name 'philosophy' comes from the contemplation of the source of that dread - 'who am I? What is the meaning of it all?' But then, you say, that it is something that can by understood in evolutionist terms. See the sleight of hand there? — Wayfarer
What I'm saying is that your pragmatic naturalism is very good - as far as it goes. But it doesn't serve as the basis for a moral code. Given a moral code, a pragmatic approach may well be best, but that code can't necessarily be derived from or justified on the basis of naturalism. — Wayfarer
Obviously when someone says that "human suffering and animal suffering are equal" they're not claiming that the forms of suffering that animals can experience are the exact same ones as the ones humans can (or vice versa), but that one unit of suffering is intrinsically just as bad regardless of what kind of being experiences it. — zookeeper
Are you seriously claiming that you thought that DC's claim that "human and animal suffering ought to be presumed to be equal" was meant in such a way that "animals don't suffer from existential dread so no they're not equal" is a valid logical counterargument? — zookeeper
My best guess would have to be that you think prescriptive claims are inherently nonsensical, useless or something along those lines, and that's why you insist on treating them as descriptive claims. Is that right at all, or even close? — zookeeper
So naturalism is going to talk prescriptively about what has to be the case when it comes to anything even being the case. And that starts with the impossibility of even talking about morality in the absence of a social system that works well enough to last long enough for its moral organisation to be a topic worthy of mention. — apokrisis
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