Lord Zentei wrote:Anyway: the problem I see with this is that your argument has no clearly defined cutoff point. In fact it specifically leads to the conclusion that there is no cutoff point, which logically implies veganism. Are you a vegan?
No I'm not, and I don't think anyone else should be either (children especially). It's woefully inadequate in terms of nutrition and our bodies have evolved to consume plant as well as animal matter. Simply put, the consumption of meat is a necessary evil. Because animal rights should be vested on a sliding scale according to intelligence, it's less "evil" to eat lower on said scale.
How are an institutional, artificially imposed dependence an acceptable excuse and preference is not?
Because, by virtue of our intelligence, human concerns trump animal concerns (see above). Pork is so heavily integrated into human agriculture and the economy that abolishing it would seriously fuck shit up (any analogy to slavery is false because it involves other humans). I'd be fully in favor of phasing it out gradually, however.
Is being stunned by a grenade and then bleeding out truly more inhumane than being electrocuted? And would you support whaling if a "more humane" method of whaling were actually found?
I'd support it
more (again, grayscale). But then, it would also be ideal if we could procure meat without any killing at all. The apex of agriculture will be when we can grow the striated tissue in isolation. Eat whatever you want then. Whale, spotted owl, human. The point is, utilitarian ethics apply to nonhumans on a limited basis.
Oh, so? If that is the case any cutoff point may be argued for and we are left with veganism. Only that results in animal deaths also.
No, again, human concerns trump animal concerns. We deal out rights to lesser beings because we can; it's a luxury. If Japan was transplanted onto Whaleworld where the only viable living could be made by hunting whales I say stick 'em.