AMP3083 wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 2:52 am
@ brimstoneSalad ---------------------------------------------------
brimstoneSalad wrote: ↑Fri May 12, 2017 2:14 pmIs it OK to kill a human animal for food too, under the same circumstances? If not, why?
Remember, it's important to avoid arbitrary distinctions.
Are you suggesting that human murder is identical to animal murder?
I'm saying the same reasoning applies by default unless you can show how they are different.
Arbitrarily claiming humans are infinitely valuable but non-humans have no value by default without a consistent reason is in violation of the basic requirements.
It's not difficult to say a human is MORE intelligent, and so has MORE moral value, thus it is MORE wrong to kill a human. (It's something that needs to be stated)
But you can not escape the fact, from such reasoning, that it is still wrong to kill a non-human despite lesser intelligence. The wrong is just in proportion to the intelligence.
I believe Ask Yourself holds something similar.
AMP3083 wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 2:52 am
To answer your question: No, I don't think it's ok to kill a human for food,
Is that just your personal feeling, or are you claiming it's immoral to kill a human for food, or enjoyment?
And if so, by what basis can you claim that it's perfectly fine (not even a lesser wrong, but involves no wrong doing
at all) to kill a non-human for food, or just enjoyment?
AMP3083 wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 2:52 am
but if a person's morality tells them it's ok to kill a human for food and he does just that, isn't that being consistent? That doesn't mean I agree with this kind of morality.
As far as the questions Ask Yourself asks, yes.
Like I said, his argument does not work for aberrant "morality".
Hannibal Lecter is being consistent when eating non-human animals or human animals. It's all meat to him, and he doesn't regard it as a problem to kill for pleasure.
Such a "morality" is incorrect, however.
AMP3083 wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 2:52 am
Is it really "an objective moral system" that makes the said consideration?
In the sense that it's the + sign that "adds" things together, which is a manner of speaking. It's more that an objective moral system "tells"* us that, in order to be moral, we must make that consideration. Just as in order to do math, we must follow the rules of addition when required and the plus sign tells us what to do.
*Again, not literally talking to us with a mouth.
I feel like you're trying to be cheeky here. That's fair enough, but did you understand the point as I explained it with respect to values vs. bricks?
AMP3083 wrote: ↑Sat May 13, 2017 2:52 am
Because from where I'm sitting, the only one making this consideration is... you. And that's about as arbitrary as you can get, despite the fact that you say "it cannot be arbitrary".
Only if you think the principles of mathematics and logic are arbitrary because they're enacted by the reasoning of human beings. If you're one of those people, why are you even trying to have a discussion using reason and logic? If not, I don't know what you think I was saying.
When I say "consider", I'm not saying "as a matter of whim decide to go with it if you feel like it".
I'm talking about weighing the value of that being's interest and how it would be violated with one action against the benefits to others and consequences of alternative actions.
For example, in the trolley problem:
We must take into consideration the number of lives at stake on each track.
It's not an arbitrary process. It's mathematics, it's game theory, it's statistics (error bars and all), it's neuropsychology.
There are aspects of approximation that are subject to bias, but as with any science, the science of morality attempts to eliminate those biases -- and as with any science it provides us few very certain answers. The grey areas, the unknowns, do not make the process useless. There are still some clear prescriptions, and more importantly, we know the direction we have to move in research to find more.
Win-lose scenarios are complicated, and involve weighing the harm against the benefit. This is not always easy.
A human having the pain of being bitten by a mosquito (very sentient, small harm) vs. a mosquito's life (barely sentient, immense harm).
When we multiply out those values, small variance in the degree of harm and the value of the being can change the answer very quickly.
Win-win and lose-lose scenarios, however, are simple. The case of eating meat is a lose-lose scenario. Humanity doesn't benefit, the non-human animals don't benefit. Any well informed and rational moral agent can see the behavior is immoral and short sighted.
Some kinds of animal testing are another matter. Humans benefit there, non-humans lose. It's arguably win-lose. That's harder to weigh, so it's more of a moral grey area where we need more information before we can make a clear call.
The risk of personal biases swinging the calculation to one side or another due to uncertainty or incomplete information is very high in those cases because they may rest on a razor's edge.
There's definitely uncertainty in some things, but that doesn't make objective morality arbitrary. It means we need more information to make a call on more complicated topics. Meat eating is simple, though. The evidence against it is overwhelming from multiple fields, and only growing.
Does that help clarify things?