10-27-2011, 09:01 PM
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#76
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Great Ocean Road
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I don't think we can underestimate the way that our judeo-christian history has influenced the way we perceive the rights of our fellow creatures. (This includes philosophical and legal arguments) I'm talking about the belief that other lifeforms were wholly created for our benefit and that we are somehow superior and outside the animal world. Many cultures saw the dignity of other creatures as equal with humans and in some cases even above that of humans. As atheists perhaps we should try to jettison some of this baggage and redefine our views.
I also agree with Rhino that empathy is not an irrational argument, like torture certain kinds of cruelty offend my sensibilities as well as my personal dignity.
Once you are dead, you are nothing. Graffito, Pompeii
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10-27-2011, 09:17 PM
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#77
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,902
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Quote:
Sternwallow wrote
Good point, but you have not rationally justified prevention of cruelty to humans which would have been my next question after the original one about non-human animals was completed.
So, on your response, why extend this yet to be supported protection of humans to other animals?
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I think that, as it has been said, more or less, that a society can be judged by how it treats its least powerful members, which include mentally handicapped, children, and its animals. Animals are part of our society and part of our family, and also, we extend this logic to humans who are part of other societies, such as laws that prevent (or are supposed to prevent) the torture of enemy combatants, and likewise we can extend empathy to animals which are not part of our society, like wild animals.
Originally, abuse of children was prosecuted under the cruelty to animals act, ironically. See: http://www.libraryindex.com/pages/13...EVOLUTION.html
Also there is a known connection between the behavior of animal abuse and the behavior of abuse of people/criminal behavior toward other people. This is one of the reasons animal cruelty laws (anti-cruelty) have been enacted.
But to answer your main question, that is, why we should try to prevent cruelty to humans, preventing cruelty to people has been the hallmark of the progress of modern civilization. Your question is confusing.
"If God inspired the Bible, why is it such a piece of shit?" (Kaziglu Bey)
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10-27-2011, 09:19 PM
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#78
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,902
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Quote:
Kinich Ahau wrote
I don't think we can underestimate the way that our judeo-christian history has influenced the way we perceive the rights of our fellow creatures. (This includes philosophical and legal arguments) I'm talking about the belief that other lifeforms were wholly created for our benefit and that we are somehow superior and outside the animal world. Many cultures saw the dignity of other creatures as equal with humans and in some cases even above that of humans. As atheists perhaps we should try to jettison some of this baggage and redefine our views.
I also agree with Rhino that empathy is not an irrational argument, like torture certain kinds of cruelty offend my sensibilities as well as my personal dignity.
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Good point, and I also agree w/ Rhino.
"If God inspired the Bible, why is it such a piece of shit?" (Kaziglu Bey)
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10-27-2011, 09:32 PM
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#79
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 4,260
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Quote:
Kinich Ahau wrote
I don't think we can underestimate the way that our judeo-christian history has influenced the way we perceive the rights of our fellow creatures. (This includes philosophical and legal arguments) I'm talking about the belief that other lifeforms were wholly created for our benefit and that we are somehow superior and outside the animal world. Many cultures saw the dignity of other creatures as equal with humans and in some cases even above that of humans. As atheists perhaps we should try to jettison some of this baggage and redefine our views.
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I think you're over-estimating the variance in views. Were there any populations in history that consistently revered animals enough not to treat them like labor-saving devices and food?
Not that I can think of.
"When science was in its infancy, religion tried to strangle it in its cradle." - Robert G. Ingersoll
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10-27-2011, 09:42 PM
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#80
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Great Ocean Road
Posts: 2,917
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I didn't say there was. I'm also not suggesting the use for food or labour is offensive to me, but animals can be killed cruelly or badly used.
Once you are dead, you are nothing. Graffito, Pompeii
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10-27-2011, 10:01 PM
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#81
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I Live Here
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Around the way
Posts: 12,641
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Some human beings throughout history have been known to use other human beings as labor-saving (as well as wealth-creating) devices and, in a pinch, even for food!
As a species, our sense of morality is highly variable.
"So many gods, so many creeds! So many paths that wind and wind, when just the art of being kind is all this sad world needs."
--Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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10-27-2011, 10:15 PM
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#82
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 4,260
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Quote:
Irreligious wrote
Some human beings throughout history have been known to use other human beings as labor-saving (as well as wealth-creating) devices and, in a pinch, even for food!
As a species, our sense of morality is highly variable.
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People still use each other that way, they just pay them.
"When science was in its infancy, religion tried to strangle it in its cradle." - Robert G. Ingersoll
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10-27-2011, 10:53 PM
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#83
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Great Ocean Road
Posts: 2,917
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Live cattle trade has been a massive issue in Australia this year.
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/cattletrade
Once you are dead, you are nothing. Graffito, Pompeii
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10-28-2011, 12:18 AM
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#84
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Stinkin' Mod
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Britland
Posts: 13,614
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I'm probably one of the least violent people casually strolling this planet, but I'd have little trouble kicking the bollocks, punching the teeth out and throwing off a cliff any fucker that kicks my dog. (If I had one and if the kick was not in self defence of course)
Stop the Holy See men!
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10-28-2011, 04:03 AM
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#85
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Organ Donator
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Beastly Muck
Posts: 13,136
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Quote:
Sternwallow wrote
Cruelty is against my preferences through normal empathy but I am not at all sure it has any moral relevance hence my current question.
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The moral relevance is in the emotional content, I'm thinking. We don't like to admit that emotions imbue all moral systems because intuitively (?) we feel they cannot be foundational principles upon which ethics are built. Perhaps emotions are at the is/ought nexus (skewing "is"), but they are there. A good scientist (or ethicist) will acknowledge that emotions underlie all morality; recently the most powerful observable evidence of this is stated negatively: in the absence of emotions, moral judgments are impossible.
Traditionally, we feel that emotional content is "irrational," but I think it's irrational to ignore (or worse, deny) it as an animating feature of morality, and we would discard it at our peril.
I'm feelin' Rhinoq when he says, "So yes, opposition to cruelty has it's basis in empathy, but I take offense that this is deemed to be irrational."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
La propriété, c'est le vol ...
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10-28-2011, 06:55 AM
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#86
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 4,260
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Quote:
Kinich Ahau wrote
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So, the best you can come up with, working from all of human history, is the mass trade/slaughter of one species being controversial (but not, importantly, stopped) over the course of one year.
"When science was in its infancy, religion tried to strangle it in its cradle." - Robert G. Ingersoll
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10-28-2011, 06:57 AM
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#87
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 4,260
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Quote:
Philboid Studge wrote
The moral relevance is in the emotional content, I'm thinking. We don't like to admit that emotions imbue all moral systems because intuitively (?) we feel they cannot be foundational principles upon which ethics are built. Perhaps emotions are at the is/ought nexus (skewing "is"), but they are there. A good scientist (or ethicist) will acknowledge that emotions underlie all morality; recently the most powerful observable evidence of this is stated negatively: in the absence of emotions, moral judgments are impossible.
Traditionally, we feel that emotional content is "irrational," but I think it's irrational to ignore (or worse, deny) it as an animating feature of morality, and we would discard it at our peril.
I'm feelin' Rhinoq when he says, "So yes, opposition to cruelty has it's basis in empathy, but I take offense that this is deemed to be irrational."
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And yet, at the same time, I don't think anyone believes, "I don't like it!" is a particularly stellar reason to enact laws.
Edit: Reworded.
"When science was in its infancy, religion tried to strangle it in its cradle." - Robert G. Ingersoll
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10-28-2011, 07:10 AM
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#88
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Obsessed Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Great Ocean Road
Posts: 2,917
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Victus, this was an aside for fuck's sake! It wasn't put forward as a response to you or an argument for anything. (just topical, I'm sorry if you waded through all those articles based on a misunderstanding)
Once you are dead, you are nothing. Graffito, Pompeii
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10-28-2011, 07:21 AM
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#89
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I Live Here
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Around the way
Posts: 12,641
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Quote:
Victus wrote
And yet, at the same time, I don't think anyone believes, "I don't like it!" is a particularly stellar reason to enact laws.
Edit: Reworded.
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That's not what he claimed. Phil merely observed that there are emotional under-pinnings to what we call morality. Do you dispute this?
"So many gods, so many creeds! So many paths that wind and wind, when just the art of being kind is all this sad world needs."
--Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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10-28-2011, 07:25 AM
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#90
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Stinkin' Mod
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Britland
Posts: 13,614
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Stop the Holy See men!
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