Cain
Straussian
{blah blah blah}
Absolutely not true and this doesn't follow from anything I have said.
I suggest you look up human rights, or see how it's used. It is a universal ("absolute") ethic that applies to humans everywhere, regardless of culture or the majority's beliefs in those cultures. It is defined in contradistinction to the relativism you're espousing. That you cannot stomach these (rather straightforward) implications testifies to the ad hoc nature of the hodgepodge of arguments endured thus far.
Precisely. The interests of animals is out of sight out of mind when humans are not involved.
But it is important to understand that you want the interests of animals considered on one hand but not the other.
Humans are at the forefront of abuses against animals. Furthermore, these abuses can be prevented and stopped *because* we're moral agents. In simple utilitarian terms, it makes sense for those concerned to focus on mistreatment as it is perpetrated by humans.
We can't really do anything about lions killing zebras, recreating Eden in accordance with our utopian fantasies. If we could, then we should... but we can't (at the moment).
Yes. And please note that I have also agreed that laws that would curtail or eliminate animal domestication and the consumption of meat could also be legitimate.
Yes, they could be legitimate, but it seems you cannot generate free-standing arguments to justify anything as everythings is "relative".
Well you are entitled to your opinion but it is not one rooted in science.
I rather despise it when people tell me I'm "entitled" to my opinion. Yes, I am, and that goes without saying. You're also entitled to *your* own opinion, but not your own facts. I'm not sure how you can suggest that the viewpoint you expressed earlier -- what people "truly" believe -- is somehow rooted in science. First of all, ethics (normative philosophy) is not rooted in science, in spite of the numerous deductive errors that litter this thread. Science can tell us, for instance when a fetus can feel pain, or when it becomes viable; science cannot tell us if sensation and viability are morally significant attributes.
Your "science" only goes as far as polling opinions, and even then you have to resort to Oprah-like art of deciding what people "really" feel. Science informs our morality, it does not determine our morality (as just about any evolutionary psychologist worth her weight in ◊◊◊◊ cautions readers).
"My genes can go jump in a lake for all I care." -- (paraphrasing Steven Pinker)
You are outlining a classic ethical problem as though I discovered it or that it only exists in the abstract. This is Ethics 101.
I'm not going to bother expressing how pathetic this comment is. The quote is rather more of the same smattering of Wikipedia-Google faux-expertise I've had to endure throughout this thread. Yes, of course there are different expectations in different cultures on moral matters. (Compare and contrast the views of women in the middle-east with Northern Europe). How does this in any conceivable way address my comments?
"Absurdity"? You might want to avoid any courses in ethics.
You can't really escape the moral conflicts based on ideology, theology, age, sex, etc. This is the subject of much research on the part of social anthropologists. You might want to let them know that their research is absurd.
I've already taken my courses in ethics. And now, again, not to appeal to authority -- but I *teach* them. My comment on "absurdity" -- *sigh* -- once again goes to *normative* conceptions.
Let me say this one final time, and you can obstinately ignore it again at your own peril.
What is considered moral differs from person to person, culture to culture. Fact. The crucial, crucial, crucial word here, however, is "considered." Without this distinction the sentence seems to express your views. Human rights activists (not animal rights activists) argue, for example, that torture is wrong everywhere, regardless of where you're from or what people in close geographical proximity happen to believe.
Since we're talking about basic ethics, I'm interested in which academic books you've read on the subject. I'm sure I could count them on one fist.