Oh, how indicative. Why does it matter who the insults were directed to?
Because you are presumably talking about my reply to you...
At the same time you're railling on about selflessness and letting animals be, you want to appeal to selfishness when caught with both hands in the ego? Right. Sure.
It's not a matter of selflessness any more than refraining from harming humans can be characterized as "selfless" behavior.
Yes, I find your insults about others just as annoying. They are deliberately, willfully destructive, they intentionally seek to derail discussion, and they demonstrate that you consider the animals you defend to be more deserving of respect, and one might even suspect life, than other human beings.
I cannot say this aside rises to the level of being "interesting."
Your contempt is clear, you are a traitor to your own species.
This is a new one for me! I'm used to being a traitor to my country and my race.
Don't worry, evolution will take care of you, most likely. (I don't know, have you reproduced? Have they emancipated themselves yet?)
Here again the phrase "substantially lacking" pops into mind.
You initiated the series of claims, not I. I repeat the common understanding. You make an extraordinary claim. Heal thyself, oh maker of extraordinary claims.
Ah, now you wish to characterize my claims as "extraordinary". Can you be more specific as to the claims in question? You're the one who took the initiative to say animal rights folks are silly because," duh, stressed meat don't done taste no good." After your economic "reasoning" was dispensed of (without much effort, I might add) you've resorted to more bluster. I mean, it was not long ago that the Humane Slaughter Act was updated because of investigative reports from inside slaughterhouses. You can consult the facts and see they do not comport to your world view.
I take a rather different approach to the issue of animal rights. As Michael Shermer observed in his last "skeptic" column for _Scientific American_, paradigms alter perceptions. I'm not going to bother citing specific abuses on factory farms any more than I am going to bother quoting specific parts of the Bible. People are socialized into both religion and diet starting at an early age. The anecdote, in my view, is to identify inconsistencies, fundamental philosophical problems, which will (hopefully) spur a more circumspect reading of the central issues. Unfortuantely, I think you're something of a lost cause. When your deductive errors are pointed out -- whether they relate to deriving an "ought" from an "is", or claiming economic self-interest results in a specific state of affairs -- you point your sanctimonious finger at your opponent's character.
Which makes this kind of comment all the more interesting:
Let's see, here you've appealed to selfishness, tried to shift the burden, deliberately tried to turn an argument into personality...
Malice?
________________________________________________________
RandFan:
Not a clue dude. I said nothing that had anything to do with species factually substantive no matter where you put the quotes. Talk about vague.
OK, if you say so. I've pointed to the page, a person can search for "factually", see your reply, see what you're replying to and determine the answer for herself. I'm not going to copy/paste the entire exchange because you've already exhibited a preternatural ability to evade the arguments at hand.
Speaking of worthless digressions:
This is just nonsense. Either the argument is cogent or it is not. "Hurried" is not a rebuttal to an argument.
I never pretended to claim that characterizing your argument as "hurried" constituted a form of rebuttal. You may want to answer my actual rebuttal -- which, not surprisingly, you are loathe to do. And do you not see the possible connection between "hurried" and "cogent"? May I add that it is "muddled". More on this in a moment (hint: look to where I quote Mumblethrax for a second time).
Randfan earlier: "What is my belief system?"
Shorter Cain: Red-herring.
Randfan current:
If you don't know what my belief system is then don't make assumptions. But this is a non-argument isn't it. Laughing and rolling your eyes is not an argument.
I'm afraid describing your belief system does not advance the arguments at hand. Are you through with your delay tactics, or are we going to discuss your favorite color?
No, it does not seek to give exclusive concern to anything or anyone. It seeks to give rights and the responsibility of those rights to humans. Pointing out that infants are incapable of the responsibility of those rights does not mean that chimps should have rights independent of responsibility.
No, it means there is an inconsistency. That is to say, you are arbitrarily assigning rights to one group while denying them to another. What is the significant difference between chimps and humans that justifies the different kinds of treatment. Incidentially, this does pertain to the above "factually substantative" nonsense.
Later in your reply you state:
Morality is that which humans define it as. If I exist in a society of two rational moral agents and I don't want to be tortured and I understand that my companion doesn't want to be tortured then we can create a compact, an agreement as to what is and is not wrong. We can also include in that compact some animals (dogs and cats in some nations cows in others) and we can exclude some animals (pigs and chickens). We are of course free to write into the compact non-normative humans.
The first proposition, incidentially, is what most moral philosophers would consider an "extraordinary claim" (are you paying attention, JJ?). Let us introduce a third party: a feral human is discovered. Can the two rational moral agents decide to kill him for food? Experiment on him? If you're uncomfortable considering a feral human, then we can replace him with someone who suffers from severe mental retardation, or other marginal cases mentioned earlier.
Just to be clear, you're saying that these two people can decide that it is OK to torture pigs and chickens, right? Furthermore, such torture is not bad because they have decided it is perfectly OK...?
Finally, I have no idea what "non-normative humans" means. Is this possibly a reference to marginal cases? Are you implying that it is OK to write them out of the compact (meaning we can torture them, experiment on them etc).
One more scenario to cover all of our bases. What if they stumble upon a third moral agent, but no agreement can be reached. Can two people decide the third person does not have rights? If not, then why not?
Here's the threading on the infamous "second question".
Cain from earlier (p. 4, I believe)
If you recognize these [anti-cruelty] laws as legitimate then what argument can you provide if a lot of people decide that eating meat imposes unnecessary suffering?
The answer, of course, is other citizens.
[snipped - I will just agree you answered this question and not press the matter as it is now wholly irrelevant.]
{sigh} If you want me to address an argument then post it or post the link to it.
It didn't do me much good the first time!
Mumblethrax wrote (Emphasis [i.e., italics] are lost in the copy/paste) :
The philosopher that RandFan cited above, Carl Cohen, argues that all humans have rights because some humans have moral agency, and all humans are of the same kind. Leaving aside definitions here and assuming this is valid, can't I say then that some animals have moral agency, and therefore all animals have rights? We can use this method to identify any number of categories into which people fit, and then claim that all such things have rights.
If we instead argue that all humans have rights because most humans have moral agency, we can then point out that most animals do not have moral agency, and using the same logic above, humans don't either. This is just a bad argument.
RandFan:
How could it matter? That is not the relevant question. Morals do not exist in a vacuum. A society of one has no morals. Does my philosophy make torturing animals in private ok? No, by my philosophy if it is ever discovered it will be penalized. If it is never discovered then it is moot.
I'm afraid the mistaken notion herein -- (arbitrarily) delimiting those worthy of moral concern to humans -- is from where all other problems spring forth. Yes, of course, if I was the only animal on the planet, then there would be no such thing as morality because my actions will not influence anything of moral significance. However, there is still such a thing as morality if I am the last human on earth and I interact regularly with non-human animals. The idea that the last human can legislate morality -- which is what you more or less concede in your example of TWO people -- is absurd. It means that I can capriciously decide that it is wrong to torture dogs, and then decide that it is permissable to torture dogs. It means that if a theretofore unknown human emerged from the wilderness, the idea of torture could suddenly become morally ambiguous because of our failure to achieve consensus. Note: this does not mean I am advancing what you mistakenly believe to be an "absolute" morality. An absolute morality means torture is wrong under ALL circumstances; that may or may not be true.
Yes, but what does that have to do with anyone besides the victim? What do you care about my interests? Why should I care about yours? I have my own answers to these questions but it is important to understand what your answers are.
You're omitting an even more provocative question: Why should I care about my own interests? Because they're
mine? I care about the interests of others -- irrespective of gender, nation, race, or species -- because interests are relevant. I don't care about rocks, socks, or blocks because these are inanimate objects incapable of having their own interests (though they might be of instrumental importance: the Grand Canyon, socks as a possession, etc). The obvious follow up question from a person flirting with nihilism: but why are interests important? Because we'd rather be happy than sad (as a matter of preference, which closely tracks with "interest"). And this goes right back to my "provocative question": if you can dismiss the interests of others (human or otherwise), then on what grounds can you support your own?
This raises more questions than it answers. It is easy to say that something is wrong. But wrong from who's perspective? Do cats comprehend right and wrong? Do they believe that torturing a bird or mouse for its own pleasure is wrong?
Ok, if we eliminate the cat then who is left? The humans. If humans think that torturing cats is not wrong then pray tell, how is it wrong?
Cats are not moral agents, so we cannot assign them moral responsibility. What perspective do we take? As suggested by my above comments, we attempt to take a neutral position: one that transcends race, gender, species, and even ego.
Moved out of order:
You want to give a right to something that can't accept the responsibility of that right. And what of the responsibility of the lion to the antelope or zebra?
What responsibilities am I assinging to animals? Presumably you want infants to have rights, yes? And what responsibilities are
you giving to them? You think children should have rights, yes? What are
their responsibilities? Moral agents are burdened with responsiblity; moral
patients are not.
Cain writes:
You're right! I failed to consider the truly awesome threat animals pose to humans.
RandFan:
Straw man. No one is arguing that animals are an awesome threat only that they do not comprehend moral responsibility.
Maybe, just maybe, I was being sarcastic.