Finally, after many, many posts of dodging and avoidance, we get a definitive (non-)answer from you - one that says it all.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 12:38 pmHell if I knowHarry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 12:16 amNow, what is your (causal) explanation of that behaviour.
The error here isn't one of mistaken anthropomorphism on our parts; it's one of mistaken exceptionalism on yours. You falsely exclude non-human living beings from mindedness, making humans the exception, despite that the behaviour of non-human living beings evidences the same motivations as ours: joy, suffering, and emotion and feeling in general (amongst other evidence of their mindedness). When called upon to provide your alternative explanation for that behaviour - even when stripping interpretations and inferences of mindedness from its description - you come up with absolutely nothing, as you at last explicitly acknowledge.
You compare non-human living beings to Roombas, but we know that Roombas are programmed by human engineers and software developers for a purpose. Who programmed non-human living beings, and for what purpose? Again, you come up absolutely empty.
Over and over, you deny that animals are capable of joy and suffering, but why? You have not provided any reasons. All you do is argue by assertion.
On the other hand, the case is compelling: by (at least) induction, parsimony, common sense, and caution, the behaviour of non-human living beings is best - and extremely plausibly, to the point of certainty - explained by their having minds (as humans have).
Aside from failing to provide a case of your own, you haven't addressed that case.
Your position is baseless, and you have no justification for denying to non-human living beings the natural rights that you (correctly) affirm for humans.
He doesn't seem to hold his beliefs for rational reasons, so all I can do is point that out. My line of questioning has reached its end, and that is its conclusion.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 3:09 pm It seems to me that you might, just might, have to accept that Henry is not going to be influenced and swung over to the camp of understanding -- about animal life -- that animals are sentient creatures with wide ranges of, well, feelings.
Alternatively, as somebody suggested earlier in other words, he is simply trolling.
Another possibility is that he knows that he has no basis for denying to non-human living beings the natural rights that he affirms for humans, but he is unwilling and unable to admit as much, especially given his selfish interest in continuing to violate their rights. Denying that non-human living beings have minds - even though he knows that they do - is, in that case, the tactic he's chosen to avoid admitting his violation of their rights.
I think that this concern is misplaced.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 3:09 pm To propose, for example, that a nation or the whole world cease to kill and consume creatures will mean that no domesticated creatures will ever come to exist!
At the group level, domesticated creatures would surely continue to exist, both in the wild (in some cases labelled "feral"), and side by side with humans, such as the held-to-be-sacred cows which (if I understand correctly) roam some of the streets of India unhindered and unmolested.
In any case, even if the group choice was between subjugation and exploitation on the one hand, and non-existence on the other, I think that the maxim "give me freedom or give me death" applies: there would still be plenty of other types of living forms into which for souls to incarnate without being subjugated, exploited, cruelly treated to the point of torture, and slaughtered.
There is another case for group non-existence: many domesticated creatures have been bred in ways advantageous to humans but detrimental to their own experience, which would make group non-existence the preferable option. A few examples are: an unnaturally increased growth rate which leaves them with brittle bones that break easily; an unnaturally increased rate of egg production which depletes their bodies of calcium and other minerals; unnaturally increased production of wool which leaves them overheated in warmer weather and unable to exist without human intervention.
Of course; naturally; and rightly so - which makes it plausible that hq is playing games with us.Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 15, 2023 3:09 pm It seems unquestionable to me that all living creatures feel misery when they find themselves in miserable conditions.