Kevin_Lowe said:
To begin with, if these "informed" ecologists and naturalists claim that not interfering with nature is a moral rule, rather than good practise given that we do not really know what we are doing, then they are engaging in the naturalistic fallacy.
I think you mean "alleged" naturalistic fallacy. If not, then again, you are essentially elevating humans to the status of gods and imposing upon us a duty to be the stewards of our planet. Most sensible naturalists, biologists, and cosmologists have figured out that we cannot play that role. I'll go further and make a normative judgment that we shouldn't. Why? We'll f it up worse than our inadvertent actions have adversely affected it already. It's far too complex a system for us to begin to tackle and appreciate all the consequences of doing so.
Perhaps more importantly, to claim that the goal of eliminating predation is inconsistent with itself is to assume that we will never have the knowledge or the technology to regulate the rise and fall of animal populations. Since you have yourself articulated the position that we cannot know what future people will be capable of, that's a strange assumption.
I'm not claiming eliminating predation is inconsistent with itself. I'm claiming it's inconsistent with your goal of minimizing animal suffering. You're just trading one group of animals' suffering for that of another. It doesn't serve its own purpose.
I am not sure if this is the naturalistic fallacy again or a non sequitur.
Neither. It's an aside. Are you just trying to find some way of critizing everything thing I'm saying in this discussion for its own sake? If not, then you don't have to make a snide remark about everything, you know.
This claim must be based on some kind of assumption that even given the technology to control aging, we will not have the technology to control population growth. I find that idea bizarre.
No, it's recognizing that technological concerns are not the only factors, or even the primary factors, that go into actual humans', not theoretical ones, decisions to have children. By and large, except in draconian regimes like China, we do not "control" population growth. Individual actors acting out of their own self interests tend to be the most relevant determining factor. (Of course, disease, famine, and war and disasters affect population growth, too, but you seem to be positing some utopian ideal.)
You're not suggesting that in some Barbarella-like fashion that we're going to eliminate sex in the future, are you?
It is simple mathematics, extrapolating from the trend that has existed throughout recorded history. Our capabilities have been increasing exponentially since our first civilisations. It's just that to people on the bottom end of an exponential curve, it's easy to mistake it for a straight line. We are rapidly approaching the point at which the rate of increase in our capabilities will tend towards infinity, until we reach the limits of what is doable in the universe.
I find that claim naive, especially in light of very recent and completely unexpected discoveries of such things as supermassive black holes near the center of every galaxy we've looked at closely, including our own, and back here on earth, such previously unimagined discoveries as anaerobic creatures who exist at the most extreme depths of our oceans, living off the minerals erupting from undersea volcanoes, and of other creatures who eat them.
The limits of what is doable in the universe are unknown, and in fact unknowable, given the fact that much of the universe is outside our own event horizon. That means we cannot get access to any information inside them.
Science is a process. It's not tending toward some endpoint of knowledge. I very much challenge the assertion that own capabilities are tending towards infinity, and any model which suggests they are.
"Problems", like "morals", are in this sense things that only exist between the ears of human beings.
Agreed. I don't see how predation is a problem. Alex, I'll take the alleged naturalistic fallacy once again for $500 and guess that it's not a problem for the rest of nature.
Sure, but how does this relate?
My example of volcanoes is meant to illustrate that what may be a problem to you locally is not a problem in a more global sense. Your seeing predation as a problem is selfish on your part due to your own feelings about it. In the bigger scheme of things--those outside your own head--it's not a problem at all.
Oh, excuse me, I'm committing the naturalistic fallacy again. I'm so sorry, but the universe as a whole seems to be committing it right along with me. I just can't help it.
This isn't exactly startling philosophical ground here. "X has bad effects and good effects. Is X good or bad? How do we decide? Oh no!".
Sometimes it's helpful to read things together in context in order to derive a point. My point? Volcanoes are a local "problem" to some people and animals and plants, but in a global temporal sense they're not.
Why is this relevant? Because it's a counterexample to your claim that predation is a problem. It may be to the hapless prey animal about to be caught and eaten, but it's not to the hungry predator or to the ecosystem in which they both live. It's not a problem for life on earth or the universe in general. In fact, it's not a problem to the population of animals to which the prey animal lives. It's vital to it, in fact. Without predation, that animals' population would explode and lead to mass starvation. That of course, would lead to widespread suffering for them, which I suspect you would agree is not something you want to encourage.
Your "problems" are not black and white, as you appear to wish them to be.
Hopefully we become informed about the relevant facts and form a sensible value judgement that we can generally agee about.
A worthy hope. I suspect that we would disagree about which facts are relevant, and which value judgments are relevant or applicable, and whether any particular goals are worthy of pursuing. I'm much more of a laissez-faire pragmatist than you appear to be. I'm no idealist.
AS