Lord Zentei wrote:That is completely false, because Jews are not rats.
Hear that whooshing sound? That the sound of the point flying over your head.
Let's restate this:
The reason why contemporary standards say that animal testing is acceptable is because animals have a lesser claim to moral protection than humans.
The Nazis and others (just about every 'developed' country) experimented on groups of "people" because they were perceived to be more animal than human and thus lacked the moral protection given towards humans.
My argument is for the second event to happen the first
must precede it. Moreover if you believe the first statement to be true, then if groups like the Tuskegee doctors/Dr. Mengele/whoever legitimately believe their experimental populaces were/are sub-human based on scientific evidence available to them then you have lost the ethical ability to condemn them.
Also, you missed this:
And if animal testing = Nazi concentration camps and Dr. Mengele, then I surmise that eating hamburgers = cannibalism?
I didn't. I viewed it as self-evident from my other response.
It's not cannibalism, it's straight up murder, and my advocacy of ethical veganism is well-known on this board.
Akhlut wrote:
Except that the Nazis were clearly wrong about the Jews' mental capacities, as Jews have identical mental capabilities as other human beings. Mice, in contrast, clearly lack several distinct human/intellectually advanced animal capabilities (language, sense of mortality, theory of mind, etc.).
Yes, but the science available at the time was unequivocal in concluding the opposite way. Whatever our read of the situation is now my argument is more precise that you are losing the ability to condemn the Nazis for what they did in the camps. More troubling for me is that you also lose the ability to prevent society from rationally deciding that other groups of people ought, once again, be excluded from the moral community and become legitimate targets for slaughter once more.
Except that human races are very nearly identical to one another minus a few very basic differences (some genetic disorders, skin pigment, skull proportions, etc.), whereas meaningful differences are essentially not there (black people and white people have the same general capacities for abstract thought, theory of mind, and language).
You're missing the boat here.
So, again: are you anti-abortion, against the elimination of invasive species, and against spaying/neutering domestic animals?
Hell, you've said before that plants and microbes should be included in the moral calculus as well; so, by logical extension, you should be AGAINST the elimination of smallpox, vaccinations, and antibiotics. Why should Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections be treated aggressively, then, if we should extend moral consideration to individual bacteria as well as humans and all other life and things that have the ability to replicate? After all, you're killing off a great deal more individual bacteria (including those that are innocent and/or beneficial) when undergoing bacterial infection treatments. Why should self-preservation be a moral consideration, since any action that isn't self-harming can be said to be about self-preservation.
I believe we each have the right to ensure our continued existence. If I am attacked by a bacterial infection I have the same right to take whatever stance necessary to eliminate the disease from me, but no further. Just like if I am attacked by an axe murderer I have the right to engage in such force necessary to ensure my continued existence, but no further. I think that this is a really simple concept and I don't see how it's troubling you as much as it is.
Guardsman Bass wrote:
Pseudoscience and racial rhetoric that even then went challenged, if not as much as it would be today. This doesn't really change my point, either - racism was denying the humanity of other people in spite of clear biological evidence of similarities. The fact that early twentieth century people either lacked that evidence (or more likely, simply ignored it) doesn't change that.
They didn't lack evidence of similarities or ignore it. They had thousands of doctors and reams and reams of studies showing all sorts of differences between 'races' and all sorts of discussions about the moral consequences of this. The conclusions were unequivocal: because non-white races were less capable than white races they should be accorded far less moral protection than white races, and could be easily lumped in with animals because they lacked all the necessary attributes of humanness.
If this conclusion bothers you then the next step is probably to widen your moral community to include animals, or at the very least engage in the moderate reforms the PETA spokesperson is asking for in the OP.
Moral considerations for human beings is useful in keeping human communities together, which in turns usually makes us all better off in terms of living standards and personal satisfaction.
Replace human with American/White/christian or whatever other denomination you so choose. The result is the same, the people on the inside are happier with higher standards of living and personal satisfaction because of their communal grouping. The statement you just made can be used anywhere, and was used by (amongst others) South Africans during apartheid.
It only seems inconsistent when you inter-relate people at the margin of the normal curve of human capabilities with members of other species. I think it's very easy to think, "These other beings are biological humans - it's good for us to save them" versus "these beings are another species that competes with us for ecological space - we can save them if we think it has merit, but we have no obligation to keep them alive and living in some form of natural or man-made ecosystem".
I don't inter-relate people people at the margins of humanity to animals. I say A. we're all animals, and B. that there's no way we can construct a moral community of "humans" without leaving the door open to future exclusion of massive parts of humanity. The only solution is the inclusion of all living beings inside a universal moral framework.
Universal systems tend to either turn into circular logic or bizarre non-consequentialist beliefs that open the door for all kinds of religious nonsense as well.
Consequentialist systems require arbitrary starting conditions that leave out massive populaces and ignore the horrific crimes committed against them. Consequentialist systems are
bad. I'll take the bizarre over the horrific any day of the week.
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic
'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan