could it perhaps be simplified to: "Is it wrong for a human being to take the life of an animal to survive?" — Outlander
Only if the process is completely painless for both dogs and humans, then yes of course. I think in order to do good, at minimum, the means must sustain and not be inconsistent with (sabotage) the ends. 'The good' in this example, however, might be instrumental (e.g. scientific, technological, juridical-political), but it's not moral (i.e. not eudaimonistic)."Would you let animals like dogs die in order to create a vaccine that will save all of humanity?" — Arnie
So, you automatically assume that whatever humans need is 'greater' than what any other species needs. That's a normal anthropocentric response.This was a question that was asked during an interview. I had to answer immediately. "Yes," I replied, "For the greater good, it would seem the logical thing to do." — Arnie
There is nothing hypothetical about it. Dogs have been killed and tortured for hundreds of years to promote humans' medical knowledge and research. But if that's okay, why not bull-baiting and dog-fights? Blood sports give humans pleasure. Is that also the greater good?Why should dogs have to die to save human beings? I know we are talking in the hypothetical, — Arnie
They are. Not just vaccines; all research. The rodents bred in a factory have no other purpose or life than to be used for scientific experimentation. They never see the outside of a cage, for a hundred generations, expect to be injected or grafted or x-rayed.If animals were produced specifically to create vaccines that would save humanity, perhaps that could be the slightly better take to it? — Arnie
In the anthropocentric and Old Testament view, it's perfectly fine: all the world is ours to subdue, plunder and trash.Is there even a "correct" answer to this? — Arnie
"Would you let animals like dogs die in order to create a vaccine that will save all of humanity?" — Arnie
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