Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 11:42 pmI believe there have been cultures in which the practice was not unusual.
Yep. There are people who eat people. They're the exception, even when taking cannibalism as a societal practice. Among our fellow life, however, cannibalism is ubiquitous. There is no restraint, no morality, for Gary's creepy-crawlers or your lion.
That's just an opinion, henry.
Demonstrably it's fact. I can point to folks, just like you, who don't eat their children. Show me your lion choosing to refrain from eating its competitor's offspring.
How can you possibly know that?
Easily. If life, including man, is just material (no soul) then pain, suffering, experience can only be an exercise of intellectual capacity. Man, in such a scenario, has the particular and peculiar complexity to suffer, to experience. Gary's creepers, your lion, do not.
On the other hand: if life, including man, is ensouled, then how is only man demonstrates the capability to, for example, refrain from eating his young or his neighbors?
No, as I say, man is a person, a free will, capable of moral judgement and Gary's creepers and your lion are not. Of course if any roaches or platypi or lions or amoeboids wanna pipe in here, I'd be glad to take their objections into consideration.
If I had any idea what a "bio-Roomba" was, I have no doubt I would disagree with that opinion.
A Roomba is...
a(n)autonomous robotic vacuum cleaner made by the company iRobot(.)
Roombas have a set of sensors which help them navigate the floor area of a home. These sensors can detect the presence of obstacles and steep drops (e.g., to avoid falling down stairs).
Your lion is a Roomba made of meat and bone, hence biological or bio-Roomba.
And, of course, you disagree. You, in your view, are a bio-Roomba too.