JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
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But those judgments certainly aren't made by the science itself. You can use these kinds of experiments to make a case for an animal being "more valuable" or whatever, but that's not a flaw in the mirror experiments themselves.The "better" or "worse" comes from the idea that an animal that can self-recognize is somehow more valuable than an animal that can not. (For an amusing example, look on the Forum Community page for the thread about animals that people will or will not eat - if they perceive the animal can self-recognize, for some people, that means they will not eat it.)
That's a whole other question. I would answer that under most conventional moral systems we don't consider killing an animal with very limited higher mental functions (such as self-awareness) the moral equivalent to killing a human (or other animal with those higher functions).I agree it's interesting. It's the value people place on it that I find odd. Why not value a frog, or a rattlesnake, as much as we value dogs? As much as people dislike rattlesnakes (and spend inordinate amounts of time trying to kill them) they are a creature perfectly adapted to their environment and perform the valuable service of ridding the world of excess mice and rats. Since dogs are sometimes praised for the exact same service, it's odd to me that people hate rattlesnakes but love dogs. I think it's because they perceive that the dog is more "like" them than the rattlesnake is, and so they are fascinated with the idea that the dog can self-identify, just like we can. It's entirely possible that dogs have completely different abilities than humans do - but they are still great animals, just like rattlesnakes are.
Personally, I think desire utilitarianism is perhaps the logical system that best describes the way our minds deal with these moral questions.
By the way, I'm a vegetarian largely for the reason you cite, though I draw the line roughly at the animal kingdom. I would argue that killing a plant for food is much more acceptable than killing mammals, not because of its relative dissimilarity to us generally, but because of the specific incapacity of plants to have desires that might be thwarted or fulfilled. FWIW, I don't think the mirror test for self-awareness informs my decision at all. Self-awareness is much higher than the standard I use. I see the capacity to have desires much closer to how people talk about whether or not something can suffer than it is to the capacity for self-awareness.
But this really is another topic--one that probably belongs in the Philosophy subforum.
Even if self-awareness were the standard used to make these value judgements, the mirror test, as pointed out, can really only be evidence for the presence of self-awareness, and isn't very compelling evidence of the absence of it.
That's pretty much the point of the mirror test for self-awareness.Dogs can "see themselves" in a mirror but mostly fail to recognize the significance that is actually themselves. Humans can "see themselves" in a mirror and most will realize it is a mirror image of themselves.
I thought you were offering a reason why the test wouldn't work on dogs (sort of like the one someone offered about dogs not having color vision). I took your statement to be a response to the question asked in the OP.
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