OMG!!! Regulus, ur living in the meatrix!!!!!!! take the red pill quick!
That's one brilliant deduction, because it goes way over my head.Player-X said:so you're saying that living things only deserve consideration if you know how that animal lived (like keeping a dog as a pet or looking at a photo of a slaugther house) and not if they are just sold packaged and ready to cook?
Yes, which brings an interesting question to mind: Was he a vegetarian out of sympathy for animals, or was he convinced eating meat was bad for his metabolism?industrian said:And in a less serious tone: Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian.![]()
You'd be right if this was practiced everywhere.Razor Blade said:The animals feel no pain really. Cows I know for sure. They are "slaughtered" with some huge number of volts of electricity and are dead within less than a second. One of my friends is in the cows business
And it is. No matter how the Quran and Torah say the animal must be killed, it reportedly still goes wrong very often. Stupid mistakes in slitting the throat often create unnecessary and gruesome suffering.industrian said:The normal way for slaughtering meat is to deliver a huge shock to the animal to stun it, then you kill it. When it has it's throat slit it is usually being made for the Jewish and Muslim community in a specialist slaughterhouse that deals in Kosher/Halal goods as the Torah and Koran deem that the animal must be killed in one move then be drained of blood. Recently, animal rights activists have released quite grizley footage of supposedly "torturous" Kosher slaughterhouses.
A much nicer reply than I would have given. I'd best leave it at that..Boltzmann said:They're not mutually exclusive worries![]()
someone must be reading too much statistics probablity theormsBoltzmann said:They're not mutually exclusive worries![]()
Sorry, but the energy transfer is still taking place. We are taking part in the food chain ( web should be a much accurate term), otherwise we'd be dead. Even if we all turned vegetaranians, we are STILL taking part in the food chain. Unless we all turn into independant producers ( which wont happen any time, our bodies cant produce all essential protiens), we are regarded as consumers, even if we dont hunt for food.Boltzmann said:And why do you keep speaking about the food chain? There’s no such a thing as “food chain” for modern humans, other than fast food chains. Now we have supermarkets. You don’t have to hunt for your food anymore.
Because... ? Further explanation is needed if you don't want people to get the wrong idea about you and your "great" thought...エッリー said:I think people should feel sorry for the humans suffering in the poor third world countries before worrying about farm animals![]()
Nope, I’ve been reading a lot of ethics lately.エッリー said:someone must be reading too much statistics probablity theorms![]()
Priority should go to the same color (aka: whites) before we care about other colors OR Priority should go to the same country (aka: whatever country you happen to live in) before we can care about other countries.エッリー said:I'd look at it on different prespectives though. Priority should go to the same species ( aka : humans ) before we can care about other species ( I am not saying animals should be mistreated, but there are things that should come first).
No, we’ve completely sidesteped normative ecological worries about obtaining food. We don’t participate in the food web anymore, not in the sense meant by ecologists (when a ecologist speak about food chain, he’s referring to a specific place [the ecosystem], where we can identify the relationships that are going on between its inhabitants).エッリー said:Sorry, but the energy transfer is still taking place. We are taking part in the food chain ( web should be a much accurate term), otherwise we'd be dead. Even if we all turned vegetaranians, we are STILL taking part in the food chain. Unless we all turn into independant producers ( which wont happen any time, our bodies cant produce all essential protiens), we are regarded as consumers, even if we dont hunt for food.
Blah, you didnt get the joke ;pBoltzmann said:Nope, I’ve been reading a lot of ethics lately.
That is called discrimination/racism. Like I said, it's a matter of priorities. First things first. I am not saying animals shouldnt deserve any concern. Ofcourse they do, but I ll illustrate my thoughts in this analogy. Say that you have to visit your sick sister in the hospital next morning, yet you have promised your friend to fix his car on the very same time. You choose to attend one of those events first before going to the other ( whatever that choice may be, I am not going to debate about that ). Does that mean that the person you visited/helped first is more important? Nope. Both of them could be equally important to you, but you priorised attending to one of them first since you can only do one thing at a timeBoltzmann said:Priority should go to the same color (aka: whites) before we care about other colors OR Priority should go to the same country (aka: whatever country you happen to live in) before we can care about other countries.
The thing is, the boundary that you set is arbitrary. You’re just being a human chauvinist, saying that we’ve higher moral status just because we’re humans.
I’m not saying that animals have the exact moral status as ourselves, the question is still open, but the answer is not an automatic “no”, based on the belief that humans are better than the other animals.
This kind of belief (“let us care for our kind first”) has led to a lot of unnecessary suffering throughout story, when countries, villages or even families isolated themselves (let us take care of ourselves first; we’ll help them afterwards).
I do agree with the point your making, I just got the impression that you were totally ignoring energy transfer. Though, I'd give you a small teaser.Boltzmann said:No, we’ve completely sidesteped normative ecological worries about obtaining food. We don’t participate in the food web anymore, not in the sense meant by ecologists (when a ecologist speak about food chain, he’s referring to a specific place [the ecosystem], where we can identify the relationships that are going on between its inhabitants).
Humans don’t have such worries, we no place anymore in the food web. If I want to eat frogs, I go to the supermarket and buy them. If I want to eat rabbits, I can buy them too. Same for pork, beef, vegetables and everything else. We don’t participate in the ecosystem anymore (well, that’s not technically correct, that’s for sure. We do participate in it, but we don’t play be the rules). We’re not hunted by anything, nor do we need to hunt anything in order to survive (except for the primitive tribes who are still around, of course).
Well you're missing the other factors in here. Human population didnt increase only because of lower concerns over food availabilty, but because there are other factors contributing such as a) many fatal diseases got cured as medicine advanced b) humans spread and explored more land = more resources c) Less major wars are being fought ( take the crusades for example, that lasted for almost 3 centuries ). d) Technological advances/Fossil fuels discovery increased the population of people living in deserted areas..etc e) Clean water is more available now, sea water can be refined and drank in areas where water is scarce....etc.Boltzmann said:In fact, I’ll make the point that ever since the advent of herding techniques and agriculture, human beings sidestepped the whole “food web” issue, since we were no longer constrained by the usual concerns over the availability of food (in a balanced ecosystem, no animal population can grow beyond a certain size, or else they’ll starve [their food supply will not increase proportionally], thus maintaining the balance. The human population jumped from a mere thousands to more than 6 billion individuals. Can you compare our situation to that of any other organism?).
You missed the point. It's the way you're choosing your priorities that is wrong.エッリー said:That is called discrimination/racism. Like I said, it's a matter of priorities. First things first. I am not saying animals shouldnt deserve any concern. Ofcourse they do, but I ll illustrate my thoughts in this analogy. Say that you have to visit your sick sister in the hospital next morning, yet you have promised your friend to fix his car on the very same time. You choose to attend one of those events first before going to the other ( whatever that choice may be, I am not going to debate about that ). Does that mean that the person you visited/helped first is more important? Nope. Both of them could be equally important to you, but you priorised attending to one of them first since you can only do one thing at a time
Similarly, instead of dividing our energy into plant/animal/poverty/war/human/yadda yadda concerns, we should priorise the most important ones at first and focus at that, then we can give the other matters our full attention once we resolve our important priorities. In that, we would solve ( or at least minimise ) each case instead of dividing our attention into all sorts of concerns , which eventually lead to nowhere.
I'm not against your humanitarian proposal. I think that helping people is good too. I'm a regular member of Permanent End International, as well as the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence (both are non-profit charities, focused on improving the human condition).エッリー said:Kinda ironic how I am proposing a Humanitarian proposal, yet i was labelled ( even if indirectly ) "selfish"![]()
That's trickyエッリー said:I do agree with the point your making, I just got the impression that you were totally ignoring energy transfer. Though, I'd give you a small teaser.Would mammal offspring be considered part of the food chain? After all, they do not hunt for food, but their parents do that for them ( Just like how we arent hunting/raising cattle ( k, subjective but that besides the point
) for food, but we let others do that for us )
No, I'm not missing the other factors - I purposefully let them out. I wasn't saying that the populational explosion seen in the human race is entirely a product of increased food availability. Aggriculture is one factor among many, but without it this growth would be impossible. No matter how much land we have, or how advanced our medicine, or how pacific we are, we'll die if we don't have food.エッリー said:Well you're missing the other factors in here. Human population didnt increase only because of lower concerns over food availabilty, but because there are other factors contributing such as a) many fatal diseases got cured as medicine advanced b) humans spread and explored more land = more resources c) Less major wars are being fought ( take the crusades for example, that lasted for almost 3 centuries ). d) Technological advances/Fossil fuels discovery increased the population of people living in deserted areas..etc e) Clean water is more available now, sea water can be refined and drank in areas where water is scarce....etc.
Yours,
-Elly
Kane-Sama said:>#3. Meat was fine for my Great Great Grandfather, Great Grandfather, Grandfather, and Father, its fine for me.
rape, pillage, murder, and general promiscuity was good enough for my antecedents. It's not for me. Nudity was good enough for them. It's not for me.
That, my friend, is a stupid arguement. While I'm a happy meat eater, if we never challenged our predecessors' beliefs, we'd still be living in hte trees.
But this thread is not about the health benefits of vegetarianism, but the moral implications of eating meat (or better yet, the moral implications of mistreating farm animals). The point you made has nothing to do with the topic.Elgar said:I dont believe Great Great was living in trees. The point I am making is my line has lived to be 80+ and they have all eaten meats. I understand your point very well and agree with the text; I should of been clearer on that point thats all. It was all about age vs. sacrifice.
Moral decisions based upon true health issues, we do not live in such a perfect world, neigh morality is based usually passed on via kin. Thus I made the assumption nutrition has something to do with the morality of eating meat. Of course like a Scientific educational book it takes place in a perfect world which in the RL I already knew before posting I was 80%+ wrong. :lol:Boltzmann said:But this thread is not about the health benefits of vegetarianism, but the moral implications of eating meat (or better yet, the moral implications of mistreating farm animals). The point you made has nothing to do with the topic.
Clothes are clothes... that doesn't mean that it's ok to senselessly murder animals or to exploit people on the process of making it... same happens with meat. You could take the typical easy way of saying "meat is meat" and avoid all the moral implications or you could do what humans are supposed to do and dwell on the issue with the aims of making things better...KanedA said:dooh, people, meat is meat, if you won't eat it you can be eatenMother Nature law :evil:
It's funny how you omited my second paragraph when it replies exactly to what you have said :Boltzmann said:You missed the point. It's the way you're choosing your priorities that is wrong.
I could just say that you're dicriminating against animals, on the sole basis that they're a genetically different from us. If you allow discrimination on a genetic basis, we could easily justify discrimination for people with Down's syndrome (since they have an extra chromossome) or other hereditary diseases.
The issue of whether animals deserve full moral status (or as much moral status as human beings) is far from solved. Just read treatises on modern ethics and you'll see it. For instance, read Animal Liberation , by Peter Singer. There are other books, but this is a good introduction.
As far as my ethical system goes, I think that all sentient life deserves the same moral status (regardless of whether they're humans, klingons or wookies). Now, whether other mammals should be considered as sentient beings is another question entirely, and I don't pretend to have an answer to it. As Oscar Wilde would say, I'm not young enough to know everything.
The problem with your approach is that you just assume, a priori, that animals are morally inferior to humans, and deserve less moral consideration. I'm not saying that they're our moral equals, either. I'm just saying that the question is tougher than it appears at first glance, and that "humans deserve atention first" needs a stronger justification than "we're of the same species".
Species-discrimination is the same as racial discrimination among humans; it just works in a different level.
And speaking about species discrimination. I take it that you have no problems experimenting on human species just like how tests are carried out on mice and rats these days ?エッリー said:Priority should depend on the needs. Ofcourse, if we had more animals suffering than humans do, then we should give them attention first then take care of the humans - which isn't the case in our modern day world.