henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Oct 03, 2023 2:21 pm
Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Oct 03, 2023 8:06 amYou're still offering no
positive alternative.
'cuz there isn't one.
In that case, given the absence of a causal explanation, the behaviour of non-human living beings is like the decay of subatomic particles: indeterministic.
It's also, though, according to you, canned and programmatic: deterministic.
It can't be both. Determinism and indeterminism are mutually exclusive.
henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Oct 03, 2023 2:21 pm
henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Aug 12, 2023 4:07 pm
You, and others, believe you
see the chicken suffering (it acts in ways you say indicate it suffers).
I believe you, and others,
misinterpret the chicken's actions. I don't believe you, and others, are assessing accurately.
And I don't believe that you really believe that, but I'm playing along simply to demonstrate that you can't justify your supposed - and false - belief anyway.
Yes, we
do reliably infer suffering, joy, and a host of other emotional states in our fellow living beings, both human
and non-human, and often from the same behaviour in both cases. There are positive reasons to believe that this inference is correct in both cases (on which, more below), but we also have no reason to believe that it's correct only in one case and not in the other: that the same behaviour in non-human living beings has a
different cause than it does in humans.
The only reason you've purported to provide in this respect is that the behaviour of non-human living beings is (supposedly) "canned", whereas human behaviour is not. This distinction does not hold for much of the behaviour in question though. For example:
If you're alone and somebody physically threatens you in a serious way, you have basically two well-known choices: fight or flight. As an individual with a stable character and personality, you're likely to make a fairly predictable choice either way in any given situation (just like non-human living beings do). Canned...
If you're hungry and not suicidal, you have basically one choice: find food and eat it (just like many non-human living beings do). Canned...
If you're bored and lonely and there are friendly companions nearby, your choice is predictable: seek out their company (just like those non-human living beings who are sociable do). Canned...
Etc etc.
Rather than being evidence that we (or non-human living beings) lack minds, the more or less predictability of our (and their) responses to emotional drives demonstrates exactly the opposite.
The behaviour exhibited in those responses
otherwise makes no sense. I've pushed you over and over to offer an alternative (causal) explanation of it, but - despite your one-time vague, meaningless, and unclarified reference to a "system reset" in one scenario - you've explicitly said that there isn't one. In that case, to paraphrase a well-known literary detective: when you've eliminated the possibility of any alternative (causal) explanation, the only (causal) explanation on the table is the correct one.
This brings us to the main positive reason to believe that the inference that living beings are sentient ("have minds" in your preferred terminology) is correct for both human and non-human living beings: the non-human living beings in question have very relevant similarities with human beings, namely, that they are also carbon-based biological entities on planet Earth who appear to share ancestors with us and are in that sense "relatives".
It's obviously true then that non-human living beings are conscious subjects (and thus have minds as you use that term), and it remains the case that in consuming the products of their enslavement, exploitation, and slaughter, you violate the natural rights you claim to defend.