Korto wrote:So, they care about other animals depending upon that animal's intelligence? They care more about chimpanzees than dogs, more about dogs than cats, etc? Do they also apply this to humans? They care more about smart people than stupid people?
Umm.... why not? I guess if something has crossed a certain threshold the value is high enough to not make a difference. Furthermore, just because you consider more intelligence more valuable doesn´t exclude you from giving your own species a special bonus value. This doesn´t have to be black and white. I´d say most people do this.
Don´t most people care more about dophins and apes than about rats and frogs?
And then thre probably are people who do not elevate humans over animals just for the sake of being human. Personally I do, but nowhere is it written that it isn´t possible.
We are not unique in having ethics. Many, probably all, social animals have a system of ethics; chimpanzee, wolf, meerkat, even god-damned chickens. It wouldn't surprise me if solitary animals had a system of ethics, too. Human ethics was evolved to fit the human niche, as part of our survival strategy. It is paternalistic hubris reminiscent of the "white man's burden" to believe our system of ethics, evolved for our situation, should be foisted upon other species which already have their own.
That isn´t really relevant. Just because other species or even individuals have different ethics doesn´t mean that one has to exclude these entities from ones own ethics. You don´t exclude other humans from your ethics just because they might have different sets of morals. Excludign others because of different morals is a trait often found among religious fundamentalists, though, but not usually among the folk that likes to call itself enlightened.
Arguing with how these ethics evolved is nothing more than the naturalistic fallacy again.
And that is their choice, not one that should be 'required' of them by some outside rules.
Obviously. Just like ethics are allways "their choice". That is exactly what I was saying but you wanted to send me from ethics class to math calss for that argument.
Furthermore, and I´ve been saying this the whole time in this thread, I wonder where all these vegans who want to "require" you to live by their rules are. I have never encountered one of these "radical" vegans. Vegans usually don´t bother you with their ethics in my experience. I´m sure you can find some if you look real hard but in every day life I don´t encounter them at all and as mentioned before I know plenty of vegans, vegetarians other people with strange food habbits.
But you're talking special cases here, with competing priorities. Lets consider this hypothetical, an alteration of the "Fat Man" question:
There's a forked train track, and because Jack is an idiot, he's standing on it. There's a train barreling down towards him, but there's a switch to change it onto the other fork. On that other fork is another person, a stranger (also an idiot). Leave the switch where it is, and die; change it, and the other person dies.
I believe it is not unethical to switch that train. Harsh, but not unethical. It may be praiseworthy if he doesn't, if he takes that bullet, but it's not wrong if he chooses to live at the other's expense. I also believe that's the choice most living things on this planet would make.
Any individual's life, no matter the species or intellect, is worth the entire universe to that individual, because when he dies, that's what he loses.
This example is deeply flawed and if anything is an argument for vegans.
There is no choice between eating meat or dying for humans. Your example would be correct if you either pull the switch and the other idiot dies or you don´t pull the switch and the idiot lives but you miss the next episode of Game of Thrones. Most people would not pull the switch because they don´t value GoT as much as an idiot. A lot of people probably wouldn´t pull the switch even if it was a dog or a pig instead of an idiot.
If you are an animal and your life does depend on meat then it is of course ok to pull the switch. I don´t think many would argue against that.
The problem with having a human in your example is that humans are covered by human ethics. It's part of the "social contract" that we don't just go around killing people for petty annoyances. If instead we changed it to some wild animal howling in the middle of the night keeping you awake and then ask... Is it unethical to kill that animal (assuming it's not an endangered species)?
I say it's not. Harsh, yes. I hope someone first tried to give it a bit of a hint, but not unethical.
And it's technically incorrect to say human ethics don't apply to other species. It's just that the way they apply changes. Since it's human ethics, and they're not human. I believe you made the point to LaCroix that a country's law applies differently to citizens than to foreigners?
You are of course correct that if you valued some other individual's life more than you valued their meat, you would logically refrain from eating meat. The point is, I don't, and I do not feel I am ethically required to.
So, we´re back to the beginning of our exchange where individuals choose their own set of morals and there´s nothing you can do about it. I see, this is discussion
is useless after all.
Look, the social contract is what we make it up to be. It isn´t some sort of intrinsic thing. It is what society defines it to be by whatever means it has. If society was made up of more vegans not killing animals would be part of the social contract. Just like it in fact is in parts of India for example.
Salm to LaCroix, just above wrote:I find this sentence quite patronising, as it seems to implicitly assume that the only reason other species don't follow our ethics is because they're not intelligent enough to understand that their ethics are wrong and ours are right.
No, this doesn´t assume this at all. Some humans follow different ethics than other humans even though they understand the other humans ethics just fine and vice versa.
You are arguing now as if there was one single human ethics system (your own) for some reason.
Even if it were patronising, which it isn´t, how can it be important to you? You don´t care about killing animals so why would you care if something is patronising towards them?