However, now that we've reached a point wherein we can think about these things and speculate on morality, that means we probably should give ethical situations more priority. It is because we have the luxury of not having to harm creatures that are demonstrably intelligent and have brains different from ours mainly in quantity and not quality that we can and should debate the moral implications of it. It is similar the the situation of our ancestors 5,000 or 10,000 years ago or longer. The morality of children doing hard labor for 16 hours a day can now be debated because it is no longer necessary for them to work the fields like it was necessary in the fields around Babylon or the use of violence and terror to maintain hydrolic societies to maintain agriculture.Bubble Boy wrote:The fact we're so much better at it is not something we should apologize for. If someone genuinely wants a scapegoat, go scream at evolution for producing us.
The fact we are such a successful species is being proven right now, whereas individuals like Alyrium Denryle can sit behind a comfortable computer desk and argue/ponder the morality of eating specific species; as opposed to the vast majority of all other species who couldn't afford that luxury even if they were capable of it.
Just to summarize: because we're not locked in struggles to survive everyday, we can and should make moral decisions differently based on various criteria. For instance, cannibalism is bad except when you're starving. Therefore, if we aren't starving to death and have the ability to, we should eat animals that can't feel suffering or feel very little of it, because now we have the power to do so.
Otherwise, as Aly's pointed out, our morality is just based on might makes right.