Bestiality is Illegal.
Is it? Not the last time I checked.
Or did you assume your local laws apply everywhere?
Bestiality is Illegal.
A dangerous act that can cause a slow painful death to either party, is something that shouldn't be legal. Especially when one party has no choice in the matter.
This One Guy said:As it happens, I'm not one.
I have worked with both abused animals and abused children, and in my experience, it's rare that you'll find a man who viciously beats his dog who isn't viciously beating his kids.
I didn't say that free will was a necessary qualification for being protected from suffering, but a necessary qualification for sovereignty over your own body. That is, in order to be able to decide what happens to your body (ie, whether or not someone is allowed to have sex with you), you need to be able to make decisions at all.
Also, I don't need to show that it's something that can be measured precisely.
As I said, there's a difference between those who act on purpose and those who act arbitrarily, but it's a difference thatmay be hardis impossible to see from outside.
I could be wrong about animals having free will, in which case I think they have to have their rights recognised the same way ours are: no more eating them, and when they kill each other they're punished. That it's difficult to tell whether something has free will is irrelevant:
it's not immoral to treat something as if it doesn't if you honestly believe it doesn't (this is a requirement of all morality, since morality only judges the choices we make - it could not judge the consequences when we have no control over them).
You have yet to demonstrate why suffering is immoral.
I've had plenty of pets, and I've treated them well, since, as I already said, I have empathy. I just don't think it would be immoral to hurt them - distasteful, yes, but not immoral.
A crime has to have a victim, otherwise it's not a crime.
Morality also implies normative force: that you are in the wrong if you violate it.
Again, I'll say it, no matter how many people are in favour of it, it's wrong to put a jew in an oven. I thinking the Nazis were actually wrong to do that, and would be if everyone in the world agreed with them.
Ah, here is the route of our disagreement: I don't believe it is wrong to cause a human pain. I believe it is wrong to cause a human pain without their consent. I also believe it is wrong to cause a human pleasure without their consent. I apply neither standard to animals, because there is no such thing as consent for animals (no free will means they cannot choose between the two options).
In response to your thought-experiment about the paralysed human being: if they have no self-determination, they're human in name only. What are we talking about here? A passive experience-receptacle. Personhood implies the ability to make choice. Being vaguely man-shaped is not enough. So, no, I don't believe they'd have rights - although like you I'm grossed out by the idea of someone torturing them. But hey, I'm grossed out by lots of stuff (including bestiality). That doesn't make it immoral.
Oh, and one last thing. Still nobody has shown that bestiality causes the animal pain. For my argument, it's beside the point, but it still needs to be established to legitimise a law banning bestiality. Horse ripping, yes, fine. Definitely causes pain. But tenderly making love to an anteater, using contraception - would it really be so awful? Hey, the anteater might even like it.
Remind me never to have you over for dinner.Unless you are a vegan then it is unlikely that you give animals the same moral rights as humans.
Bestiality is Illegal.
Necrophilia is also Illegal.
However having sex with a ham sandwich is totally fine.
Why stop there? What about plants? A plant is a living, metabolizing thing. They deserve the same rights as every other living, metabolizing thing! All you people having sex with watermelons should be arrested.
.Morality is defined by society. Individuals within a society can disagree with the social definitions but they must adhere to them or face consequences. Of course, there can be extenuating circumstances, but society will deal with those as they occur. Our society has defined beastiality as immoral and hunting as moral (within certain guidelines). It really is as simple as that.
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Opening day of rifle season is Oct. 11.
.Remind me never to have you over for dinner.
Wow. Lots of half-baked ideas here. Let's start with free will. You complained earlier that RobRoy was dismissing the edifice of philosophy by saying that morality is subjective. Yet here you are taking free will as a foregone conclusion, as if philosophy hasn't spilled just as much ink trying to determine what it is, whether we have it, and what its implications are.
If your concept of morality rests on the exclusively human capacity for free will, you first have to show that a) free will is more than a useful fiction, and b) only humans have it. So far, you've only assumed these two points, which is why your argument is unconvincing.
So when you are asleep or in a coma you're fair game, eh? I would hate to be your roommate...
Fine. Can you show it's measurable AT ALL? Even in principle? Is there a free will particle that human brains radiate?
Fixed it for you.
You have no way of knowing whether ANY entity has free will, so it's a useless concept.
You just signed a moral blank check for every one of the millions of humans who don't believe in free will (including many on this board). Let us know how that turns out for you.![]()
That it's wrong to cause another living thing needless suffering is axiomatic to at least a couple of the world's major moral systems (Buddhism, Jainism, Hinduism). This isn't an appeal to authority, merely pointing out that asking for an explanation for an axiom is to misunderstand what an axiom is.
So if someone offered you enough money, you'd torture a puppy? I don't care if your argument is airtight--I never want you around me or my family or anyone I care about. (Incidentally, this isn't part of my argument--just letting you know what the real-world, possibly irrational consequences of your beliefs are.)
Wrong. A crime is a violation of a law. Period.
This is all kinds of confused. Your implication is part of the definition of "morality" and "wrong", and has nothing to do with "normative force".
Bravo! Do you want an award?
Still haven't demonstrated that animals don't have free will.
Oops. Apparently I missed the post where someone else brought up the same point. But this underscores my desire to never let you around me or my family, lest one of us falls asleep.
You have some strange thoughts about what makes sex okay. Your position amounts to this: it's okay to have sex with something that can't say no. Since an anteater, or a person in a coma, or a dead body can't protest, then it's okay to have the sex.
Let me suggest a wiser, probably less painful, and definitely more legal test: You should only have sex with someone who can give consent.
Mom's apple pie?What about apple pie?
.Just to clarify, nobody is arguing against my right to bang a grilled cheese sandwich right?
I didn't call RobRoy out for saying morality was subjective - I called him out for saying moral issues are not resolved by argument .
My demonstration that free will is more than just a useful fiction: there's a genuine difference between those beings that subject their own choices to inspection and deliberately choose between them, and those things that are blindly following the laws of nature.
It may be that animals have free will, yes, but if I'm wrong about that I'm wrong about everything. If animals have free will, not only is it wrong to have sex with them (without their consent), it's wrong to kill and eat them.
It's in principle as measurable as any other faculty of the mind. The brain is hugely complicated, but one thing we know is that if it's making choices there must be some structure in it that's able to make choices.
This could be identified.
On a less rigorous level, there are various outward signs that suggest the capacity exists: the ability to compose original sentences, for example.
Screw off.
it's not immoral to treat something as if it doesn't [have free will] if you honestly believe it doesn't
No, I wouldn't torture a puppy for money. I just think other people get to make that choice for themselves.
It's a relevant example. If there's one example where morality isn't determined by society it wrecks the whole edifice.
Are you in favour of killing the man in this thought experiment?
Again, could be wrong. If I'm wrong about this I'm wrong about everything, and animals should be treated like members of society. Certainly if they have free will they can be held responsible for their actions - so next time a lion kills a gazelle it ought to be arrested.
But this isn't the case - it's assumed (by society at large) that animals don't have free will. It's implicit in our treatment of them.
The person in a coma is still a person. My position doesn't amount to this. My position is that if it has free will, it needs to consent.
Just to clarify, nobody is arguing against my right to bang a grilled cheese sandwich right?
The tricky part is hitting that temperature sweet spot where it's warm enough to feel good, but cool enough that it doesn't remove skin.
And I'm not calling you out for saying anything about subjectivity either. I'm calling you out for dismissing the difficulty with free will, and treating it as if it's settled.
Sure, you're allowed to begin with the axiom that humans have free will and animals don't. But you have not (and demonstrably cannot) prove that this is the case.
You're just restating the premise. You've demonstrated nothing.
The point is you can't know whether an animal (or a person) has free will or not, so it's irresponsible at best and immoral at worst to rest your moral judgments on this condition.
And the second part of this statement only holds if morality is absolute and based on whether or not an entity has free will.
Yeah, the structure inside the brain that's making choices...is that the "free will" structure? How does *it* make choices? Does it contain another smaller "meta-free will" module inside of it? You've got a regress problem.
Really? Can you explain how--in principle--we could identify it? How would we rule out the possibility that something else wasn't influencing it to make the choices it makes? How could we rule out that it wasn't just a fancy random number generator?
Sorry, but a computer can compose original sentences. And the whole point of my argument is that ANY outward sign can be generated by some process that doesn't involve free will.
Very eloquent.
I don't see how you can seriously defend this idea. But I *can* see how you'd ignore my criticism of it and address something totally unrelated.
So people have a *right* to torture animals, since to do so is merely a personal choice (and part of their free agency)? Would it be wrong then for me to physically restrain someone I saw torturing a puppy?
Wrong. Saying morality isn't determined by society doesn't mean that there are moral absolutes, either. At best it merely points to difficulties with a particular formulation of morality.
Your powers of deduction are truly astounding.
Would you kindly refrain from including me with you in reference to how animals are treated? We obviously do not treat animals the same. Also, I don't give a flying flock what society assumes.
Demonstrate that a person in a coma has free will. He can't very well exercise control over his environment, now can he?
I haven't treated it as if it's settled. If I had done, I wouldn't have bothered defending my belief that we do have free will. I have done. My defence is that we can examine our possible actions and choose between them. We do so. I'm doing it now as I type this. Yes, I believe that free will depends on deterministic systems of the brain. Yes, some philosophers disagree.I think that being able to examine our possible choices and choose our actions constitutes free will. If you don't, we're working from two different definitions.
This doesn't go anywhere. If I'm right and moral rights only belong to those things with free will, we have no choice but to act in good faith. If we are indeed obligated to respect the choices of beings with free will, it's no argument to say 'but that's too hard to do'. It cannot be irresponsible or immoral to try to fulfil your moral obligations as best you can.
I didn't claim there was an infallible way to identify free will. Of course any outward sign could be generated by some process that doesn't involve free will. The point is there are outward signs that suggest free will. If our judgement is wrong, yeah, that sucks, but it can't be helped.
You presumed to edit my post. I knew what I meant to say when I said it. It was rude. I stand by it: screw off.
People don't have a right to torture animals - they have a right not to be stopped from torturing animals (unless, of course, said animals belong to someone else). Yes, it would be wrong of you to do that.
Fine. This doesn't answer my point, though. If animals had free will they would have to take responsibility for their actions. That the notion seems stupid is support for my argument that they don't. If you think it's okay to hold animals accountable for their actions, please say so.