I am perfectly willing to accept your example above. It has certain implications you may have failed to consider, such as what constitutes "serious artistic purpose," or why-oh-why the government is allowed to dictate that we cannot eat it, but that's fine. I'll also defend it against objections from Boink's loud complaints: "IT'S NOT NECESSARY. PEOPLE HAVE BEEN PRETEND-KILLING ANIMALS IN MOVIES, WHERE YOU GET TO SEE IT HAPPEN CLOSE-UP, YET YOU WANT TO DO THIS FROM THE STAGE. BESIDES, WHY PROHIBIT PEOPLE FROM EATING IT? YOU'RE DENYING THEM PLEASURE AND SUSTENANCE!!"
Your latest reply below sometimes verges on tantrum.
I'm simply saying that the hypothetical statement AS WRITTEN doesn't give us any reason for her to have the dogs killed and that the road you're going down makes the hypothetical so A) complex and B) silly that it serves no purpose.
Again, I think your so-called objections have introduced needless complexity because they're not very well thought through. It just takes me a little bit more time to explain why they are not well-thought out. As for "serving no purpose," that is, um, sort of the point.
Dude. Seriously? I mean...seriously?
I'm reasonably confident that the "Hotel Heiress" can say "You! Minion! Take these dogs to the East Wing (yes, you may use the helicopter) and let me never see them again!)." But, you know, if you want to keep adding lipstick to this pig (to turn a phrase) I guess you can some how find a way to explain why your "Hotel Heiress" lives in a studio apartment.
Perhaps I know a little bit too much about celebrities, Paris Hilton in particular, but not all of them live in sprawling estates. I'm not sure if she still does, but at one time she lived with her sister in some beach house. I remember seeing a picture of it, probably on television.
Well, actually that wouldn't work according to the original scenario (am I the only one here who actually read the damn thing?). The dogs--for one reason or another--do not suit her needs. The only thing the scenario left out was why killing them was her only solution.
Here I try to bend over backwards to at least try to accommodate your objections and this is what I get. I was thinking the fat dog could have been given time to lose weight, or the nervous dog time to overcome its fear of people.
Er, you're forgetting that I was talking about the scenario AS WRITTEN. Various people have made up some ad hoc reasons for her to kill them (like your one about the very discrete vets who will only be discreet if you get them to put your vet down but won't take it to the pound, for example;
Actually, as I said, I had that reason in mind the whole time.
that's a pretty unlikely reason in the real-world, but a reason in its own hypothetical world) but A) those ad hoc reasons are either stupid (see above) or not parallel to the meat-eater's reasons and B) I'm talking about the scenario AS WRITTEN!!!
Yes, B was a valid concern, which is the reason for my clarifying post in this thread. The first part of A has already been addressed, we'll get to the second part below.
I do like your claim that for a rich person it is cheaper to spend nothing (the cost of asking a friend to take a dog to the pound) than it is to spend something (the cost of getting a vet to put the dog down). That's a mathematically interesting principle. If I could only find a rich person who could be persuaded of that: "look, dude, you're so rich that if you give me 1% of your assets that's actually LESS MONEY than if you give me nothing!"
I think I was listening to the animal rights discussion segment on Philosophy Talk awhile ago, and a vet called in saying he was tired of ordinary, non-celebrities wanting to pay 30 dollars to put their cat down because it clawed up furniture. You're making such a ridiculous argument: do you honestly think it would be less of a burden to feed, house, and keep the animal under wraps in the "east wing" than to have it put down?
Of course, that's no funnier than the idea that because your friends "might" betray you it stands to reason that a completely unknown vet must be less likely to betray you.
I'm not sure who said the vet is "completely unknown" or why you insist on this weak comparison. You should stick to something more compelling, such as having it anonymously dropped off at animal shelter. At a friend's place there would just be continuous opportunities to blow the lid. You have more chance encounters, people who are more likely to gossip (versus some middle-aged vet). Just get it over and done with.
OK, enough playing around, let's get to the crux of the matter:
Actually, no--my argument MAKES NO CLAIMS ABOUT THE ETHICAL VALUE OF KILLING ANIMALS. It points out that the situation in the hypothetical scenario is not parallel with the situation of the meat eater. Sheesh!
No, in order for your objection to be valid, it must be registering some significant difference. A person could claim the two scenarios are completely different because in one case we're talking about
dogs and in another we're talking about
cows. But that's an insignificant difference. A person could claim cows are raised in a
completely different environment than dogs, but that's also insignificant.
If your objection is to have any meaning than there must be some reason why killing the dog is undesirable. If that's an insignificant value, then why are you twisting yourself into knots over it? If off-loading the animal on friends, or onto public care facilities, or keeping it in the east wing is morally indistinguishable from killing it, then who cares if she kills it? Just get to the punch, as martu does.
Is she doing anything wrong?
I have offered no judgment as to whether it is ethically wrong for her to kill the animals in her situation. All I have said is that it is wasteful, because the animals could give pleasure to others.
I do not recall you putting it in those terms, but I am pleased to see these sentences following one another. It's difficult for you to say you have not offered judgment when you're introducing these other values, waste and pleasure to others.
In his book
Practical Ethics, Peter Singer has a consider an abortion scenario. A woman has been planning a trip overseas to the Himalayas for nearly a year. The plan is to leave in six months, but she unexpectedly gets pregnant. She has always wanted children, but this one will interfere with her impending adventures. She figures that since the window for having children is more open, she can have an abortion now, go on a fantastic trip, and then start breeding. The idea here is that it's OK to kill for a trivial reason. I don't see anything wrong with this case because the embryo is replaceable and is not yet a morally significant being. Your objection above is misplaced because there's already an oversupply of animals in need of homes. It only works if you attach some value to the dog itself, which belies this insistence of yours:
So I have not conceded anything about whether or not the animal's life is an intrinsic good. Jeez, people, try to actually read the words that are written down here.
Well, not explicitly.
On pleasure and sustenance you wrote:
Well duh. But we can't get the pleasure of eating meat without killing animals. Whether or not that is a sufficient reason for killing them is the question at hand. Our attitude towards someone killing dogs for NO REASON AT ALL does not help us think about that question.
You just eliminated the "sustenance" non-reason for me, so let's never speak of it again. I think you severely misunderstand the purpose of my example.
Anyway, the rest of your post is rather repetitive, though I do see you completely ignored the beginning of mine -- where I followed up on your reply to another poster. I asked what's wrong with killing an animal for fun? You had alluded to some consensus we are supposed to have between meat-eaters and non-meat eaters.
The point of my original thread is that many meat-eaters are all too happy to legislate for others over what constitutes valid and invalid killing.