Batman Jr. said:
I wouldn't mind you calling me arrogant if only you recognized your own haughtiness in expressing the importance of man over other animals.
Actually, I don't. Man is no more important in the cosmic scheme of things than any other creature who exists, has ever existed, or ever will exist. How's that?
What I don't get is if man is no more important (your word) than any other animals, then why do you assert that he has a greater obligation towards them? Before you answer, please understand I get the moral agent business, but that premise itself is anthropocentric. By definition, it assumes that man is indeed more "important" in that humans have greater responsibilities vis-a-vis other animals. How is your position consistent with itself?
It is a matter of moral consistency. You treat other humans cordially and with respect because of your empathy for them, yet you treat other animals that could be empathized with in much the same way much as you would an inanimate object. Why?
Actually, I do treat other animals I encouter with empathy and respect, at least the ones I am capable of empathizing with. Tricky explained this very well in his thread over in R&P, if you wish to check it out.
I don't feel much empathy for the mosquito pestering me, however, or the spider who bit me last week.
How can you be consistent in your ideals if you feel empathy only for "cute" or "intelligent" animals, but not ones who are royal pains to humans, like termites, for perhaps a better example?
You credibility on this issue would be enhanced by admitting that you don't empathize with parasites or pests and that lack of empathy is inconsistent with your basic premise that mankind must be kind to all the animals.
If you were to do that, then why would your drawing the line at pests and parasites be any more moral than my drawing the line at certain animals that humans having been eating for dinner for thousands of years?
The animal doesn't have the cognitive capabilities to bring the empathic premise to its correct logical ends. We do. This is, as I've said before in the other thread, a classic case of the bandwagon fallacy.
A classic case of anthropocentrism. You are imbuing humans with cosmic significance and obligations that we simply don't have.
One involves killing a being which possibly exhibits the capacity to suffer. Ice cream doesn't involve killing anything.
Neither involves a moral choice if both are on our diets.
AS