Purple wrote:Not quite. The approach here is to create a system whose exclusive purpose is to benefit the broadest possible group that can be expected to fallow it. Since non humans are not expected to understand or fallow human morality such a system would not care about them. Althou it would care for say sentient aliens.
It newer goes down to the individual. It just does not care for anyone who is outside it's intended population. Sort of like rules of a particular sport. You have rules for teams, for players and even for the fans participating. But there will newer be a sports rule regarding random people on the other side of town that have no idea a game is going on.
Now you're moving goalposts away from "what does us best through cost-benefit analysis" towards a contract based system of ethics that has been largely discredited for the past hundred years (if not more).
Long story short, you destroy your own system of ethics in the first sentence. What it means to be "expected to follow" these ethical codes is fluid and always subject to societal pressure, and the second someone falls outside this expectation they lose protection. Case in point, does a mentally handicapped person have protection under this? An infant? The elderly and infirm? How about someone who has received poor schooling their entire life in a rural area and doesn't understand higher concepts of morality (or reading, for that matter)? How about someone from the Sentinel Islands off of India who has avoided all contact with people off the island? How about a sociopath? How about someone who understands this contractual view of rights but thinks it's wrong and should be opposed? Who determines sentience when it comes to aliens or animals (something which depends on intelligibility, not capability)?
Your view of rights is slipshod, there are a litany of excuses to exclude any group from moral protection and to subject them to the ultimate injustices and oppression for mere societal perception. See: The Holocaust, Oppression of Women, the Pogroms, Slavery in the United States and Caribean, etc.
Put another way, here's Cary Wolfe on the subject:
The effective power of the discourse of species when applied to social others of whatever sort relies, then, on a prior taking for granted of the institution of speciesism—that is, of the ethical acceptability of the systematic “noncriminal putting to death” of animals based solely on their species. And because the discourse of speciesism, once anchored in this material, institutional base, can be used to mark any social other, we need to understand that the ethical and philosophical urgency of confronting the institution of speciesism and crafting a posthumanist theory of the subject has nothing to do with whether you like animals. We all, human and nonhuman alike, have a stake in the discourse and institution of speciesism; it is by no means limited to its overwhelmingly direct and disproportionate effects on animals. Indeed, as Gayatri Spivak puts it, “The great doctrines of identity of the ethical universal, in terms of which liberalism thought out its ethical programmes, played history false, because the identity was disengaged in terms of who was and who was not human. That’s why all of these projects, the justification of slavery, as well as the justification of Christianization, seemed to be alright; because, after all, these people had not graduated into humanhood, as it were.”13
A similar point, in terms that will be even more familiar to students of American culture, is made in Toni Morrison’s eloquent meditation Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination. She argues that the hallmarks of the individualist imagination in the founding of United States culture—“autonomy, authority, newness and difference, absolute power”—are all “made possible by, and shaped by, activated by a complex awareness and employment of a constituted Africanism, which in turn has as its material condition of possibility the white man’s “absolute power over the lives of others” in the fact of slavery.14 My point here, however (and it is one I will press in my discussion of her reading of Hemingway’s The Garden of Eden), is to take Morrison very seriously at her word—and then some. For what does it mean when the aspiration of human freedom, extended to all, regardless of race or class or gender, has as its material condition of possibility absolute control over the lives of nonhuman others? If our work is characterized in no small part by its duty to be socially responsive to the “new social movements” (civil rights, feminism, gay and lesbian rights, and so on), then how must our work itself change when the other to which it tries to do justice is no longer human?
It is understandable, of course, that traditionally marginalized peoples would be skeptical about calls by academic intellectuals to surrender the humanist model of subjectivity, with all its privileges, at just the historical moment when they are poised to “graduate” into it. But the larger point I stress here is that as long as this humanist and speciesist structure of subjectivization remains intact, and as long as it is institutionally taken for granted that it is all right to systematically exploit and kill nonhuman animals simply because of their species, then the humanist discourse of species will always be available for use by some humans against other humans as well, to countenance violence against the social other of whatever species—or gender, or race, or class, or sexual difference. That point has been made graphically in texts like Carol Adams’s The Sexual Politics of Meat, which, despite its problems, demonstrates that the humanist discourse of species not only makes possible the systematic killing of many billions of animals a year for food, product testing, and research but also provides a ready-made symbolic economy that overdetermines the representation of women, by transcoding the edible bodies of animals and the sexualized bodies of women within an overarching “logic of domination”—all compressed in what Derrida’s recent work calls “carnophallogocentrism.”
What about euthanasia? After all that is killing too.
If you don't see the fundamental difference between someone opting to end their life and killing someone for your own pleasure there's a problem afoot.
'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