I am pointing out that, because of our intelligence, we are able to transcend beyond what our intelligence was originally meant for. — darthbarracuda
Now I'm guessing you are thinking that if something is "simply pragmatic" or "simply a result of nature", then it isn't "moral" because morality ought to involve some kind of transcending human choice. You have the Romantic conviction that humans are above "mere nature" in being "closer to God", or "closer to goodness, truth and beauty", or whatever other traditional morality tale has been part of your up-bringing. — apokrisis
And science now supports that position rigorously. — apokrisis
All systems persist by striking a fruitful entropic balance. They need global coherence (physical laws, genetic programmes, ethical codes) as their organising constraints, and also local action (material degrees of freedom, evolutionary competition, individual initiative) as the dissipative flow of events that sustains the whole. — apokrisis
Sorry. Remind me which those are again? Are we talking patents for perpetual motion machines? — apokrisis
LOL. This is quite simply atheistic divine command theory. — apokrisis
OK. But I ask again, where do you stand if the husbandry was perfect and the lamb had the happiest life, a painless death? — apokrisis
Applying your own calculus of suffering, how would it be immoral to eat the lamb? — apokrisis
Murder is and always has been a forensic legal term with an exact definition which does not apply to any non-human (which for the purpose includes unborn foetuses, incidentally). No amount of propaganda will change that. — Barry Etheridge
Since when did we not have the right? It is assumed in all the major moral and religious codes in history and prohibited by none of the world's legal systems. — Barry Etheridge
I have to say is only flimsily supported at best by science — Barry Etheridge
Anchoring your morality in what is prevents you from wondering what could be. What could be better, what is not the case, possibilities. — darthbarracuda
No, we're talking vacuum cleaners, refrigerators, public maintenance, art, etc. — darthbarracuda
It's not just suffering, it's preferences as well. I don't get to decide who lives and who dies. — darthbarracuda
Either objective versus subjective is a false dichotomy, or morals are subjective. — jorndoe
I'm sure I could explain it a million more times and you still wouldn't twig what is meant by "constraints".
I will simply repeat that constraints are what make possibilities actually possible. Limits give choice meaningful shape (such that some action could be regarded as actually moral vs immoral). — apokrisis
So you now admit your argument based on suffering has no bearing here. We can remove that from the discussion. — apokrisis
Now we instead have something truly ethereal - preferences. Why should I have to share yours? Where is the argument for that? — apokrisis
What I see to be the fundamental problem with your view is that you aren't taking into account the phenomenology of ethics. — darthbarracuda
I step in because I care about the person getting raped. I have placed the fundamental value on persons. My intentions are, ultimately, towards people regardless of how these intentions have evolved in the past. — darthbarracuda
No we can't. And no, suffering has inherent bearing in here because suffering is partly the violation of preferences (i.e. why masochists can feel some pain but not suffer - they have a preference for pain). — darthbarracuda
Like you would say, our preferences are a result of the environment. — darthbarracuda
Smil: In 1900 there were some 1.6 billion large domesticated animals, including about 450 million head of cattle and water buffalo (HYde 2011); a century later the count of large domestic animals had surpassed 4.3 billion, including 1.65 billion head of cattle and water buffalo and 900 million pigs (Fao 2011).
You know I've explained my view of the role of pleasure and pain as signals which make biological "common-sense". Just as humans are also wired to value their social interactions in terms of empathy and antipathy.
The difference is that while I do ground these feelings in something measurably real, you seem to want to treat them as cosmically-free floating - just feelings that exist in some abstracted fashion with no connection to anything in particular and thus absolute in their solipsistic force. — apokrisis
All you are saying is that you have discovered that you are constrained to think in certain ways about events or choices in life. And while you also know that this is due to some ancestral history (both a biological and cultural one), right there your analysis stops. You just accept whatever it is that you have ended up being without further questions. — apokrisis
If the lamb that ends up on my plate involves no suffering, where is the issue with me enjoying my dinner? It cannot be any issue to do with suffering, can it? — apokrisis
But they are not preferences any more in the sense of being a moral choice when you are saying you have no choice but to respect your own discovered feelings on these matters. — apokrisis
I am saying we can instead understand the actual moral codes of societies - which are general pretty enthusiastic about hunting and meat-eating - as natural preferences because they encode the kind of balancing acts that make for a flourishing society. — apokrisis
You are speaking up here only for your own very personal minority view of what feels right when it comes to being a member of the tribe, Homo carnivorius. So either you have special privileged knowledge the rest of the world doesn't share, or you are just speaking to some particular quirk of your own psycho-developmental history. — apokrisis
So while you waffle on about all right-thinking dudes knowing instinctively that eating animals is inherently bad form, pretty much the entire human race plainly just does not believe you. — apokrisis
But as you say, your position doesn't rely on such facts. The only thing that matters in all existence is your preferences on some issue. If we want to understand morality, we must come to you - learn about how self-deluding we all are. — apokrisis
It's not self-consciously egoistic, but you are talking about individual compulsions. In the end, it's a matter of I want it this way. But usually the rhetorical appeal is made to something the tribe holds sacred, perhaps one established principle against another. The individual sometimes experiences the pain of being torn between two compulsions, perhaps between the "ego ideal" and the lust or the hunger of the body. Our self seems more or less constituted by the "spiritual instinct," so that is given the superior position. That compulsion is the one we want recognized as adults. The self projects itself as a universal and therefore conceals its egoism from itself (which may run counter to an investment the so-called anti-egoistic.)We feel compelled to act ethically. Ethics is not egoistic, ethics do not necessarily align with our preferences. Only in the "virtuous" man does this occur. — darthbarracuda
I wouldn't be so smug about it, but, yes, I think with the proper education and a little bit of honesty, people can see the errors of their ways — darthbarracuda
We are finite mortal creatures, the meaning we give to events are not in the events, the meanings are in us and as such morals are fictive, stories we tell our self. In spite of this willfully acting with a good conscience means acting in accordance with laws we give to our self which is, I think, the only way we can act freely. — Cavacava
In other words, the content of our phenomenological experiences does not change with the introduction of a new scientific image of man. You need to take into account this. — darthbarracuda
If the person that ends up in the cemetery involves no conscious suffering (perhaps you 360 no-scoped them), where is the issue with this murder?
The issue is that someone's preferences were violated. Suffering isn't just the violation of a preference - that's much too empty. But suffering is, all things considered, the most prioritized of experiences. — darthbarracuda
Yes, "life is sin." Movement is sin. There's a religion of stasis in our guts somewhere that just reaches out and grabs us now and then. Not life-death but un-life, un-death. And yet this religion itself looks like some modulation of the killer instinct and quest for a position at the apex that it condemns in a sort of sublimated verbal violence. It seeks to bring guilt and humiliation to everything self-assured and at home in our flesh-eating flesh.Yes, we progressives ought not only eliminate ourselves, but eliminate all animals (as they are barbaric consumers too), and even all plants (as they too show no respect for minerals and gases). — apokrisis
Yes, "life is sin." Movement is sin. There's a religion of stasis in our guts somewhere that just reaches out and grabs us now and then. Not life-death but un-life, un-death. And yet this religion itself looks like some modulation of the killer instinct and quest for a position at the apex that it condemns in a sort of sublimated verbal violence. It seeks to bring guilt and humiliation to everything self-assured and at home in our flesh-eating flesh. — Hoo
I can't tell if you got where I was coming from. — Hoo
Humans are not the only ones who have sentience. — darthbarracuda
Either the sentience of animals is identical or so close to identical as makes no difference to that of humans in which case they should be afforded the identical moral and legal protection or it is not and there can be no rational objection to their being treated as the food that nature made them. — Barry Etheridge
Where and how do you draw the line? — Barry Etheridge
The moral argument for vegetarianism ends up effectively proposing that it it is better to starve to death than eat meat (doubly so for vegans), sociopathy by any other name. Doesn't exactly scream 'morally superior' to me! — Barry Etheridge
Well in fact that scientific image produces pain-killers, and hip operations, and cognitive therapies, and other stuff which can change the content of that phenomenological experience. — apokrisis
Did the lamb express a preference? Is it capable of having one? Again you are having to support your position by talking nonsense. — apokrisis
Do you have a preference about lamb-eating? Might I have a different preference? Now we are talking. What general ground decides the issue morally when preferences are in conflict like this? — apokrisis
No, really it's not. — Barry Etheridge
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