Moderator: Community Team
Metsfanmax wrote:Well, I'm glad that this is funny to you, but whether people deserve life or death I think deserves a little more than a chuckle and a witty retort.
patches70 wrote:What's funny is that you think no one can figure out what a "human" is. There are two pictures of two different types of living things, I simply ask for anyone to pick out which picture is the picture of a human. I know you'll probably pick the chicken but people with common sense will choose otherwise.
Humans are the only member of a branch of hominids. The only blurring of the line of what is and isn't human is the early hominids and it's a moot point because those creatures are now extinct. We are all that is left of that branch.
So yeah, your point of view is pretty much funny. We, just like every other living thing on the planet that wishes to survive, requires the consumption of other living things in one way or another.
It is right and proper that we humans find ourselves on the top of that food chain in most circumstances.
patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Well, I'm glad that this is funny to you, but whether people deserve life or death I think deserves a little more than a chuckle and a witty retort.
What's funny is that you think no one can figure out what a "human" is. There are two pictures of two different types of living things, I simply ask for anyone to pick out which picture is the picture of a human. I know you'll probably pick the chicken but people with common sense will choose otherwise.
Humans are the only member of a branch of hominids. The only blurring of the line of what is and isn't human is the early hominids and it's a moot point because those creatures are now extinct. We are all that is left of that branch.
So yeah, your point of view is pretty much funny. We, just like every other living thing on the planet that wishes to survive, requires the consumption of other living things in one way or another. It is right and proper that we humans find ourselves on the top of that food chain in most circumstances. It's better than being at the bottom of the food chain I suppose.
And yes, when you are eating plants you are consuming living things. Such is the nature of our existence.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Well, the lives of plants don't matter in terms of pleasure or pain because I can't/don't want to imagine them preferring a state of existence over a state of non-existence. Nor can I imagine the harvesting vast crops of plants for the sole purpose of consumption and production as mass enslavement and genocide (or rather "specie-cide"). Insert incorrect Holocaust analogy (of course, pigs and plants won't go extinct if they're valued for the goods which can be derived from them. Jews under Nazism weren't so lucky, but forget my false analogy. Get angry and offended, you Nazi!)
However, I can imagine that other living entities like furry animals and maybe disgusting insects as preferring life over death, so we should maximize the utility of such creatures.
Maybe not insects because they're not sentient enough. Without exchanges of goods, we won't get market prices, nor can we ask animals' their willingness-to-pay in order to determine deadweight losses. So, we don't have any visible constraints or maximizable value, along which we can correspond with utility. So, my Metsian Animal Persons morality is impractical and especially incoherent in practice, but I'll continue saying that you're wrong. Metsian Animals are people. Why do I keep doing this? Because I'm using the motte-and-bailey tactic.
Whenever you disagree, the chances of my equating your argument (you) with a racist argument (racist) are high. It doesn't improve my argument at all because it can applied against me since I'm 'specieist' against all plant matter, bacteria, etc.; however, I've always ignored that argument by dodging it with irrelevant questions and by ignoring commonly accepted premises such as "all humans are equally morally valuable--regardless of national origin or skin color." It doesn't matter that such a premise contradicts all racist arguments because you sir are acting like a racist.
The writers of the paper compare this to a form of medieval castle, where there would be a field of desirable and economically productive land called a bailey, and a big ugly tower in the middle called the motte. If you were a medieval lord, you would do most of your economic activity in the bailey and get rich. If an enemy approached, you would retreat to the motte and rain down arrows on the enemy until they gave up and went away. Then you would go back to the bailey, which is the place you wanted to be all along.
So the motte-and-bailey doctrine is when you make a bold, controversial statement. Then when somebody challenges you, you claim you were just making an obvious, uncontroversial statement, so you are clearly right and they are silly for challenging you. Then when the argument is over you go back to making the bold, controversial statement.
Some classic examples:
1. The religious group that acts for all the world like God is a supernatural creator who builds universes, creates people out of other peopleās ribs, parts seas, and heals the sick when asked very nicely (bailey). Then when atheists come around and say maybe thereās no God, the religious group objects āBut God is just another name for the beauty and order in the Universe! Youāre not denying that thereās beauty and order in the Universe, are you?ā (motte). Then when the atheists go away they get back to making people out of other peopleās ribs and stuff.
2. Orā¦āIf you donāt accept Jesus, you will burn in Hell forever.ā (bailey) But isnāt that horrible and inhuman? āWell, Hell is just another word for being without God, and if you choose to be without God, God will be nice and let you make that choice.ā (motte) Oh, well that doesnāt sound so bad, Iām going to keep rejecting Jesus. āBut if you reject Jesus, you will BURN in HELL FOREVER and your body will be GNAWED BY WORMS.ā But didnāt you just⦠āMetaphorical worms of godlessness!ā
3. The feminists who constantly argue about whether you can be a real feminist or not without believing in X, Y and Z and wanting to empower women in some very specific way, and who demand everybody support controversial policies like affirmative action or affirmative consent laws (bailey). Then when someone says they donāt really like feminism very much, they object āBut feminism is just the belief that women are people!ā (motte) Then once the person hastily retreats and promises he definitely didnāt mean women arenāt people, the feminists get back to demanding everyone support affirmative action because feminism, or arguing about whether you can be a feminist and wear lipstick.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Can y'all spot Mets' motte(s) and bailey?
BTW, that is an incorrect usage of motte-and-bailey. I have been perfectly consistent in what I have been saying; motte-and-bailey is when I say one thing and change my response when questioned further about it. I have not once changed my argument that any being that is capable of having preferences deserves to have those preferences considered in a moral system.
patches70 wrote:Mets argument-
It's wrong to kill humans.
All creatures that feel pain are human.
Thus it's wrong to kill animals for food.
A captive bolt to the brain kills a cow with zero pain, thus it should be alright to eat the cow then, Mets? The cow didn't feel any pain and up to that point in it's life it never had to worry about being predated on by wolves or such. It was always kept warm, safe and fed. It led a nice easy life until it was time to repay all the effort that went into taking care of that animal. And then it was just lights out, no pain.
About the only thing I can agree with Mets on is that it's not a cool thing to treat animals cruelly. Even if one is just going to eat that animal anyway. No need to make the animal go through needless suffering.
It's cool, Mets, if you don't want to eat meat. It's cool to even try and convince others to not eat meat. But you shouldn't resort to coercion in those attempts to convince. And if people say, "Nah, I'm not going to drink your kool-aid, but thanks anyway", then you should just say "Ok then" and be on your way.
Metsfanmax wrote:I think that what you are doing is murder.
mets wrote:This has nothing to do with being "vegan" or not.
mets wrote:It has to do with you committing murder, and me thinking that it is not OK. Do you think coercion might be justified if people are committing murder? I do.
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Well, the lives of plants don't matter in terms of pleasure or pain because I can't/don't want to imagine them preferring a state of existence over a state of non-existence. Nor can I imagine the harvesting vast crops of plants for the sole purpose of consumption and production as mass enslavement and genocide (or rather "specie-cide"). Insert incorrect Holocaust analogy (of course, pigs and plants won't go extinct if they're valued for the goods which can be derived from them. Jews under Nazism weren't so lucky, but forget my false analogy. Get angry and offended, you Nazi!)
What argument would you provide that could begin to convince a Nazi that what they were doing is wrong? Seriously, that's a challenge that extends to anyone in this thread. Suppose I'm a racist -- convince me that I am wrong.However, I can imagine that other living entities like furry animals and maybe disgusting insects as preferring life over death, so we should maximize the utility of such creatures.
Why do you believe that anyone other than you, including humans, prefers life over death? How many people have you asked?Maybe not insects because they're not sentient enough. Without exchanges of goods, we won't get market prices, nor can we ask animals' their willingness-to-pay in order to determine deadweight losses. So, we don't have any visible constraints or maximizable value, along which we can correspond with utility. So, my Metsian Animal Persons morality is impractical and especially incoherent in practice, but I'll continue saying that you're wrong. Metsian Animals are people. Why do I keep doing this? Because I'm using the motte-and-bailey tactic.
Or, in other words: since it will be hard to figure out what to do otherwise, we should just keep enslaving them and eating them. I hope you understand just how awful this reasoning is. Even if you think that I cannot possibly imagine a "coherent" future under my standard, how could that possibly justify slavery and torture of beings that should have legal rights protecting them from that?
Maybe we should just kill and eat human babies. We can't ask them whether they would prefer that or not, so what's really wrong with it?
BTW, that is an incorrect usage of motte-and-bailey. I have been perfectly consistent in what I have been saying; motte-and-bailey is when I say one thing and change my response when questioned further about it. I have not once changed my argument that any being that is capable of having preferences deserves to have those preferences considered in a moral system.
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Whenever you disagree, the chances of my equating your argument (you) with a racist argument (racist) are high. It doesn't improve my argument at all because it can applied against me since I'm 'specieist' against all plant matter, bacteria, etc.; however, I've always ignored that argument by dodging it with irrelevant questions and by ignoring commonly accepted premises such as "all humans are equally morally valuable--regardless of national origin or skin color." It doesn't matter that such a premise contradicts all racist arguments because you sir are acting like a racist.
You don't understand the term speciesism, evidently. Speciesism is not the same as treating members of different species differently; rather, it means treating members of different species differently precisely because they are a member of that species. I don't treat grass differently from chimpanzees because one is grass and the other is a chimpanzee, I treat them differently because one has preferences and the other does not.
Speciesism (/ĖspiĖŹiĖĖzÉŖzÉm, -siĖĖzÉŖz-/) involves the assignment of different values, rights, or special consideration to individuals solely on the basis of their species membership. The term is mostly used by animal rights advocates, who argue that speciesism is a prejudice similar to racism or sexism, in that the treatment of individuals is predicated on group membership and morally irrelevant physical differences. The argument is that species membership has no moral significance.[1]
The term is not used consistently, but broadly embraces two ideas.[2] It usually refers to "human speciesism" (human supremacism), the exclusion of all nonhuman animals from the protections afforded to humans.[3] It can also refer to the more general idea of assigning value to a being on the basis of species membership alone, so that "human-chimpanzee speciesism" would involve human beings favouring rights for chimpanzees over rights for dogs, because of human-chimpanzee similarities.[4]
patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:I think that what you are doing is murder.
You are wrong. Just because you think something doesn't make it true.
I think you are a crazy nutbag, am I right? According to your thinking I must be. From now on let it be known as fact that Mets is a crazy nutbag.
Or, is that just my opinion?
If it's just my opinion, then what I think doesn't matter, even if there are other people who think you calling people who eat steak "murderers" is just plain crazy. You've just drank too much kool-aid is all.mets wrote:This has nothing to do with being "vegan" or not.
Yes it does. If you were an omnivore you would't be spouting this nonsense.mets wrote:It has to do with you committing murder, and me thinking that it is not OK. Do you think coercion might be justified if people are committing murder? I do.
Coercion is never justifiable.
And now you are calling me, personally, a murderer. If I am a murderer, Mets, then please, enlighten me on exactly what person I supposedly murdered?
Metsfanmax wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Can y'all spot Mets' motte(s) and bailey?
Can you?BTW, that is an incorrect usage of motte-and-bailey. I have been perfectly consistent in what I have been saying; motte-and-bailey is when I say one thing and change my response when questioned further about it. I have not once changed my argument that any being that is capable of having preferences deserves to have those preferences considered in a moral system.
You might think that I have an incoherent system in practice, or that I am not adequately responding to your claims of incoherency, but that doesn't qualify as motte-and-bailey, because I still completely defend the system that you argue is incoherent.
BigBallinStalin wrote:What's wrong with that? Institutions, mets. Consent. You don't understand these, so I won't bother explaining their role to you for the 10th time. Even if I spelled out the ridiculousness from the implications, you'd run from your bailey and into your other mottes. "Well, my moral stance isn't universal, so it doesn't apply to people in the 3rd world." [Therefore, animals aren't people in the 3rd world, by implication]. Or, "let's talk about legal rights instead"! How about the implications of legal rights x, y, and z? "You're being a racist!" (motte).
Impressive motte, by the way. They all seem to become so similar though. You totally failed in regard to the exposed impracticality of your utility stance.
Maybe you were too busy running into the motte to pay attention? Here's how it'll work: I'll lay out several premises which prevent my stance from dipping into racism, and I'll keep mentioning the inherent problem of moral axioms in this debate (which entities get what).
Speciesism (/ĖspiĖŹiĖĖzÉŖzÉm, -siĖĖzÉŖz-/) involves the assignment of different values, rights, or special consideration to individuals solely on the basis of their species membership. The term is mostly used by animal rights advocates, who argue that speciesism is a prejudice similar to racism or sexism, in that the treatment of individuals is predicated on group membership and morally irrelevant physical differences. The argument is that species membership has no moral significance.[1]
The term is not used consistently, but broadly embraces two ideas.[2] It usually refers to "human speciesism" (human supremacism), the exclusion of all nonhuman animals from the protections afforded to humans.[3] It can also refer to the more general idea of assigning value to a being on the basis of species membership alone, so that "human-chimpanzee speciesism" would involve human beings favouring rights for chimpanzees over rights for dogs, because of human-chimpanzee similarities.[4]
Guess what you've been doing? It's analogous to the underlined. Can you figure it out? (the italicized is the hint).
Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:You have utterly failed. Sadly, pathetically, unapologetically failed.
Not sure what you mean. We humans have been consuming animals as food for a very long time. The realization that maybe it's not the best thing to do is a fairly new one in cultural terms. I don't expect to win everyone over in one argument. This isn't failure, because I didn't expect to succeed. I am just planting a seed of some ideas that I want people to consider. This is a discussion that is ongoing, both on this forum and in our society, and I am playing my part in keeping that fire burning and forcing people to think about their actions. BBS may still be eating animals today, but if I have done my job well at least he'll have to think a little more about whether he should be. And there's nothing wrong with that -- we should always be introspective about our actions.Give it up, show that you aren't an idiot and say, yes guys, I hadn't really thought it through.
The arguments posed against such a societal shift are as demonstrative of a lack of human imagination and ingenuity as the slaveowners of the 1850s who thought that if we let the slaves free, they would destroy our societal order and we wouldn't have the means to produce our cotton and our tobacco anymore. "We've always done this, I don't want to think about how to do it a different way" is as perennially bad an argument as any of the justifications used for trampling on the rights of minorities. You seem to generally be a fan of challenging conventional wisdom -- the only reason you are so perturbed by this particular version of it is because it challenges your own actions.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:_sabotage_ wrote:You have utterly failed. Sadly, pathetically, unapologetically failed.
Not sure what you mean. We humans have been consuming animals as food for a very long time. The realization that maybe it's not the best thing to do is a fairly new one in cultural terms. I don't expect to win everyone over in one argument. This isn't failure, because I didn't expect to succeed. I am just planting a seed of some ideas that I want people to consider. This is a discussion that is ongoing, both on this forum and in our society, and I am playing my part in keeping that fire burning and forcing people to think about their actions. BBS may still be eating animals today, but if I have done my job well at least he'll have to think a little more about whether he should be. And there's nothing wrong with that -- we should always be introspective about our actions.Give it up, show that you aren't an idiot and say, yes guys, I hadn't really thought it through.
The arguments posed against such a societal shift are as demonstrative of a lack of human imagination and ingenuity as the slaveowners of the 1850s who thought that if we let the slaves free, they would destroy our societal order and we wouldn't have the means to produce our cotton and our tobacco anymore. "We've always done this, I don't want to think about how to do it a different way" is as perennially bad an argument as any of the justifications used for trampling on the rights of minorities. You seem to generally be a fan of challenging conventional wisdom -- the only reason you are so perturbed by this particular version of it is because it challenges your own actions.
Motte.
Also, this criticism of yours has been addressed numerous times.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
You won't get anywhere with Mets. He's using the motte-and-bailey doctrine, which is essentially fallacious. Just sayin'.
patches70 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
You won't get anywhere with Mets. He's using the motte-and-bailey doctrine, which is essentially fallacious. Just sayin'.
I know, but when he told you that you can't understand what a human is because it's supposedly never been defined, I had to laugh and say something. I'd stayed out of the ridiculousness until that point, but, well, I'm only human, after all.
Metsfanmax wrote:[Maybe you were too busy running into the motte to pay attention? Here's how it'll work: I'll lay out several premises which prevent my stance from dipping into racism, and I'll keep mentioning the inherent problem of moral axioms in this debate (which entities get what).
You have not actually laid out a single premise which prevents your stance from dipping into racism, as far as I can tell. Please correct me by providing some examples if I am mistaken -- I honestly have not seen a single example from you. Or, answer the question about how you would convince a Nazi that they are wrong -- that would suffice as well. I am not accusing you of being a Nazi, I am merely asking you why you think the Nazis were wrong.
I don't think chimpanzees should be treated similarly to humans because they are similar to humans; I think that beings which can see themselves as existing through time should be treated as moral persons which are capable of having rights, and this includes at least chimpanzees, humans, and probably at least a few other mammals. Humans are not particularly special in my moral framework, only in yours, so many of your arguments are an example of projecting rather than meeting them directly on point.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Sure, Mets. I "haven't laid out a single premise" because whenever I do, you ignore it with your garbage reasoning. There's no need for me to take you seriously.
Think harder. What species have preferences and which don't?
See? A racist can 'avoid' your criticism by not referring to race, but instead to skin color. Just as you can 'avoid' speicieism by referring not to species but to particular characteristics in such a manner that results in classifying a subset of species as 'legitimately' inferior. That was easy. You're a specieist. Your argument by analogy is self-defeating since it'll apply to anyone's moral stance on this issue. This is why I don't constantly play the "ad Nazism" argument; this is why I use it as a reductio ad absurdum to any of your criticisms. It's a motte, so stop using it.
Metsfanmax wrote:Unless you actually thought that I couldn't tell the difference between a male human child and a chicken, t
mets wrote:The argument here, very simply, is that when you say human, you don't actually know what you are saying. (Prove me wrong. Define exactly what you mean when you say human.) That is because it is a fuzzy concept
mets wrote:It has to do with you committing murder, and me thinking that it is not OK. Do you think coercion might be justified if people are committing murder? I do.
Coercion is never justifiable.
And now you are calling me, personally, a murderer. If I am a murderer, Mets, then please, enlighten me on exactly what person I supposedly murdered?
Metsfanmax wrote:/ wrote:If by your logic, we are pretty much just animals exhibiting natural biological motives
The only point in bringing up that we are the product of evolution is to demonstrate why using a species category for anything other than classification is as fundamental an error as using race as a category for anything other than classification. Species doesn't even have an actual meaning when you're considering issues like this -- what actually is a human? Where is the dividing line between humans and chimpanzees and other animals? Chimpanzees and humans both evolved from a common ancestor. If we trace our lineage back through the generations to that common ancestor, we see a continuous line of creatures that started at something like "chimpanzee + human hybrid" (though it was probably anatomically much closer to modern chimpanzee than it is to modern human), and slowly changes to something that looks like modern humans on one side, and something like modern chimpanzees on the other side. It is purely an accident of history that the descendants of that lineage other than the currently existing humans, chimpanzees and bonobos died out. Suppose that they instead had all survived. Would you be prepared to decide where the species boundary ends for humans, and begins for non-humans? Essentially, even using the term "human" is a fundamental error when having a discussion of morality, because human is not a uniquely defined quantity. All living humans (modulo identical twins) have different genetic code, and human is a term we invented to group together people whose genetic code is highly similar but not exactly identical. The difference between you and me, and you and a chimpanzee, is a matter of degree and not of kind. It's an unavoidable conclusion of evolution. It means that BBS doesn't even know what he is talking about when he says the word human, which is why his moral system is so confused.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users