madurobob
Philosopher
Yeah, um, you can set your moral compass by PETA. I choose not to.
ETA: whoops - forgot to quote Drudgewire on that...
ETA: whoops - forgot to quote Drudgewire on that...
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Thank you. Might you allow me, then to re-present what I consider to be a wonderful illustration of where this line of thinking fails. I can't take any credit for it, though - it's all Cain's:
The point here, as JdJ hints at, is that most of us already accept that animal harm (even death that follows idealised living conditions) is problematic if performed outside the context of food production. We somewhat irrationally give meat-eating a special pass.
Read it again, there were reasons given for each putting down.
On the one hand you can put the dog down or give it away
On the other you can kill the cow for meat, or eat non-meat and leave the cow alone.
Why is one decision to kill more noble than the other?
Actually cannibalism is quite dangerous.
I don't think so. It used to, but these days in the U.S., I can eat in just about any restaurant (I'm not a vegan, though), and there is a great variety of convenience food available to me.And it takes a lot of effort. Eating some meat is easier and more natural.
And it takes a lot of effort. Eating some meat is easier and more natural.
Yeah, um, you can set your moral compass by PETA. I choose not to.
ETA: whoops - forgot to quote Drudgewire on that...
OK, so as long as killing the dog brings either the heiress or the executioner pleasure, then everything is cool with that? Interesting. And if they eat the dogs thats even better?Killing a dog for no reason at all seems pointlessly wasteful (after all, the dog might bring pleasure to some other person). Killing a cow for meat clearly brings pleasure (and sustenance) to those who eat that meat. I'm not saying that this demolishes any case for veganism, but it pretty solidly demolishes this particular case. The spoiled heiress and the meat eater just aren't parallel cases.
See Volatile's response to this, he covered it well.Oh, and would you care to have a stab at the "collateral damage from harvesting vegetable crops" question? Why is it o.k. to harvest wheat, say, knowing that doing so will kill animals, but not o.k. to kill those animals directly in order to eat them? We wouldn't harvest the wheat if doing so would kill humans, would we? Isn't this a clear case of "ranking" human life above animal life?
I did read it again. You're confused about my point. There are reasons given for why she doesn't want the dog. There is no reason given for why she has the dog put down. Why not give the dog away rather than put it down? In the first case she is supposed to ask her friends if they want the dog. They don't, so she has it put down. I'm sorry, but "asking her friends" doesn't exhaust the possible pool of people who would want the dog. Frankly, giving away Paris Hilton's dog would be a pretty easy task (what crazed fan wouldn't want to own it?). So, no, she's having the dog put down for no reason at all by the lights of the original example.
Killing a dog for no reason at all seems pointlessly wasteful (after all, the dog might bring pleasure to some other person). Killing a cow for meat clearly brings pleasure (and sustenance) to those who eat that meat. I'm not saying that this demolishes any case for veganism, but it pretty solidly demolishes this particular case. The spoiled heiress and the meat eater just aren't parallel cases.
Yes, for a number of (rather trivially obvious) reasons.
The most obvious and straight forward one is that in using this example to somehow point out that veganism is hypocritical you are engaging in what is an enormously fallacious line of reasoning - that because we cannot eliminate harm entirely, we should not make any efforts to reduce it as much as reasonably possible.
It is trivially true that a vegan diet, though not perfect from any perspective, results in significantly fewer deaths than the meat-eating alternative.
On the Heiress problem, as Madurobob points out, it is on your shoulders to explain why the Heiress' whims were "for nothing", but your whims to eat meat when plant-based sources are as nutritious and as readily available to most in the West, are not.
In other words - why does your no doubt sincere desire to reduce animal harm cease at the precise moment your taste-buds get a craving for meat? What, as Cain said in the other thread, is so exaltant about the sense of taste that it alone is sufficient to trump otherwise sincerely-held convicitons?
I choose to eat what I wish in order to make my life more pleasant and easier. In one case - veggie burgers - it means I choose a vegetarian example because I do not like the taste or the effort to cook a hamburger. But when it comes to bacon and eggs for breakfast - there is no alternative. So the pigs must die so I can enjoy my bacon.
See Volatile's response to this, he covered it well.
One can, but can 6.7 billion? The fact is, most of our meat comes from factory farms.One can keep animals for slaughter without being cruel to them.
I understand that. My point was that from the premise I started with (that it's wrong to kill animals without justification) the fact that we're on "top of the food chain" doesn't constitute justification for me. No more than the fact that I have the power to do some other wrong act somehow makes it moral.Well, we ARE on the top of the food chain. That's not an argument, that's a fact. However, it is morally wrong in my opinion to mistreat animals. Killing them as humanely as reasonably possible so that we can eat them is not immoral as far as I'm concerned.
I do appreciate your live and let live attitude. Actually, it's not a problem for me. I don't eat meat.If it's a problem for you morally, being a vegetarian is absolutely the right choice for you.
Yes, for a number of (rather trivially obvious) reasons.
The most obvious and straight forward one is that in using this example to somehow point out that veganism is hypocritical you are engaging in what is an enormously fallacious line of reasoning - that because we cannot eliminate harm entirely, we should not make any efforts to reduce it as much as reasonably possible.
It is trivially true that a vegan diet, though not perfect from any perspective, results in significantly fewer deaths than the meat-eating alternative.
Like Madurobob, you've missed the point. The Heiress has no reason AT ALL to have the dogs put down. Why doesn't she just give them away? Tweak your hypothetical so that the killing is at least related to her whim (as it is for the meat-eater's) and you may have a point. As it is you've just got a straw woman.On the Heiress problem, as Madurobob points out, it is on your shoulders to explain why the Heiress' whims were "for nothing", but your whims to eat meat when plant-based sources are as nutritious and as readily available to most in the West, are not.
In other words - why does your no doubt sincere desire to reduce animal harm cease at the precise moment your taste-buds get a craving for meat? What, as Cain said in the other thread, is so exaltant about the sense of taste that it alone is sufficient to trump otherwise sincerely-held convicitons?
Please re-read the "Heiress Problem" post. There is no claim in that post that killing the dogs gives the Heiress pleasure. You've substituted one straw man for a different straw man. I think we are all agreed--meat-eaters and non-meat-eaters alike--that killing animals simply because snuffing out a life gives you pleasure is wrong. But there's no parallel between the person who kills a dog because it's death per se "gives them pleasure" and the person who kills a cow because they want to eat its meat.OK, so as long as killing the dog brings either the heiress or the executioner pleasure, then everything is cool with that? Interesting. And if they eat the dogs thats even better?
Seriously, are you trying to start some kind of straw-man conflagration here? Everybody is agreed that inflicting needless suffering on animals is wrong. If you can find a slaughterhouse where the animals are killed in fights-to-the-death then everyone--vegan and carnivore--will agree that it should be closed. Try to stay a little on topic here.What about Michael Vick? Would his actions have been fine as long as he was gathering the carcasses, making a stew, and serving down at the local homeless shelter?
It is not irrational to give meat eating a special pass - it is entirely logical to do so because it is part of most people's diet.
You guys can't even read your own hypothetical. The story didn't go "a spoiled heiress had a dog, and suddenly she decided killing it would be fun, so she did." The story was that the dog itself became an inconvenience to her. Her "whim" was to get another dog. Killing the dog was the "solution" she came up with. Now the problem in the original hypothetical that I kindly pointed out to you is that while killing cows is necessary for the cow-eater, killing dogs is not necessary for the inconvenient-dog-owner. That's pretty self-evident. I'm sorry that you thought you had a great hypothetical that would put us all on the horns of a dilemma and that I went and ruined it for you, but instead of desperately clinging to it why don't you see if you can't come up with one that is actually parallel to the situation of the meat-eater?Yes, they are. Killing the animal satisfies personal whim. Why is her whim unnecessary, and yours is defensible?
Not necessarily. I've simply offered a sufficient argument to dispel your straw man. Come up with a better hypothetical and I might have to dig somewhat deeper.Seems it comes down to pleasure for you.
Hoo boy, you really love this question-begging stuff, don't you? Please tell me what part of my argument licenses that piece of ad-hom nonsense?That is, the pursuit of pleasure is an acceptable reason to subvert otherwise sincerely held beliefs.
Well, no, actually, I don't--if I believed that I probably would have said it. As I didn't say it (or anything vaguely analogous to it) I can only assume you're imputing that position to me because you'd rather offer insults than engage in an actual argument.Do you really believe that?
Clearly not. If someone gets pleasure from torturing their opponent's argument beyond all recognition, that wouldn't excuse that behavior, either.Is that extensible to any other form of pleasure other than taste? Let's say someone get's pleasure from animal torture (and there are doubtless people who do) - is their behaviour excusable?
"Afraid? I'm not afraid of Nothin... 'cept a box of matches"Seriously, are you trying to start some kind of straw-man conflagration here?