That's a comforting thought, henry.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 12:24 amAnd, I disagree with just about everything you say, Harbal.
A Moral Dilemma?
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
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Re: A Moral Dilemma?
But, "women" and "children" are not, right?henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 6:04 pmMan is not apart from nature, no; he is, though, unique in nature. He is a person. He is a free will capable of moral discretion and judgement. He is responsible for himself.
Is there any thing that is not unique in Nature?
"he" nor "women" are not 'persons', obviously.
you human beings may have free will and may be capable of moral discretion and judgement, but you adult ones are the only thing on earth that does Wrong, and chooses to do Wrong.
And, continually doing Wrong and choosing to keep doing Wrong is certainly not being responsible for "yourselves", at all.
No other thing does Wrong, besides you adult human beings, so, for this reason alone all other things do not even have to be responsible for themselves.
Will you define what the word 'machines' even means or refers to, to you?henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 6:04 pm Gary's creepy-crawlies are functionally machines. Marvelous machines to be sure, but still just machines.
Also, when did a 'person' become 'a person', exactly, to you?
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
The only real pest, and the only one making a nuisance, on earth are adult human beings.Harbal wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 6:49 pmBut many animals exhibit social restraints similar to our moral restraints. For instance, carnivorous species tend not to eat members of the same species, just as human beings don't. And we most certainly regard cannibalism as a moral issue. There are things that set us apart from the rest of the animal kingdom, but I don't think we should just assume that no other animal experiences anything akin to our human sense of morality.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 6:04 pmMan is not apart from nature, no; he is, though, unique in nature. He is a person. He is a free will capable of moral discretion and judgement. He is responsible for himself.
We don't really know what any other living creature actually experiences
I can see how it is convenient to think of it like that, especially when we find those machines are making a nuisance of themselves.Gary's creepy-crawlies are functionally machines. Marvelous machines to be sure, but still just machines.
Also, a lot of the insects on earth are just eating up/cleaning the actual mess being left behind by you human beings.
So, if you human beings stopped making the mess', then there would not be as many insects, especially in what are called 'your houses, or homes'.
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
And, let 'us' not forget that the 'human animal' is absolutely no different in this regard.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 9:53 pmIt appears that they do when food is extremely scarce.
“Almost all predators express cannibalism when conditions get grim enough,” says Jay Rosenheim, an entomologist at the University of California, Davis. Some desperate herbivores do, too, he adds.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... 0he%20adds.
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
Well then 'it' is not 'cannibalism'.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 11:10 pmSorry to dash your hopes, but...every species indulges in cannibalism. And many, like lions, don't do it for food but to establish dominance.
LOL So, what, exactly, is stopping every other meat eating animal eating their young or their peers, or even themselves, if, as you claim here, canno refrain themselves from doing so?henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 11:10 pm And, no, the alpha lion that kills and eats a competitor's offspring didn't choose to do it. For that lion it's instinctual.
Only humans regard cannibalism as wrong. Only persons can refrain from eating one another..
LOLhenry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 11:10 pmGary's creepy-crawlies can't suffer. Suffering is a feature of the self-conscious. While conscious, no creepy-crawly has a self to be conscious of. Pain, for Gary's creepy-crawlies, is a stimulus, not an experience. Your snake doesn't want to live or die, and is incapable of being terrorized.Suffering, particularly physical suffering, is not dependant on intellectual capacity
So, why does the snake instinctively breathe and eat, exactly like you do, and, why does the snake have a flight or fight instinct, exactly like you have?
What a load of absolute 'self-centeredness'.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 11:10 pm The flush is just a change in stimulus.
Becuz you or Gary or anyone (even age and biggy), persons, are more important, in leaps & bounds, than any bio-Roomba.Why would you say it matters less in the context of nature as a whole?
Why, exactly, do you, coincidentally, 'a person', believe that you persons are somehow 'more important' than any and all other animals?
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
Only if you respond to the questions I ask you, to what I challenge you on, to where I have pointed out your Wrong and/ False claims, and/to what I say and write here.
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
What's sad about it?henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 12:43 amWe even disagree on this. I find it a little sad myself.
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Re: A Moral Dilemma?
I'm fine with the principle of a person's life belonging to them. It sounds great, even if it doesn't mean much. What I disagree with is your attitude towards other sentient creatures. I wouldn't call it sad, though.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 1:57 pmI think when men of good conscience can agree on nothing (even sumthin' as simple as a person's life belong to him and no other) there's nuthin' left but avoiding one another or war. That, to me, is sad.
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Re: A Moral Dilemma?
...to you. I know. You made it abundantly clear: a person's life is not his, your life, is not yours. It's all drivel...to you.
Hey, who cares what we do to creepy crawlies or lions? We're no better or different than they, right? They eat each other without worry or agonizing, yes? If we are them then let's act as they do and quit moralizing about it (cuz all that moralizing, well, none of it means much...the creepers don't care, the lion doesn't care, why should we? Why should you?)What I disagree with is your attitude towards other sentient creatures.
I do.I wouldn't call it sad, though.
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Re: A Moral Dilemma?
And what of all the conventions -- human rights, legal protections & rights -- these can't mean much either, yes? How can any of these conventions mean much if, like natural rights, they're just stories we tell ourselves?
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
No, I don't think it's drivel. I would like to think my life is my own just as much as you, but just simply considering that to be the case makes no difference to anything.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 2:40 pm...to you. I know. You made it abundantly clear: a person's life is not his, your life, is not yours. It's all drivel...to you.
I don't know why I care, I just know that I do care, and if I find anything sad, it's that you seem not to.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 2:40 pmHey, who cares what we do to creepy crawlies or lions? We're no better or different than they, right? They eat each other without worry or agonizing, yes? If we are them then let's act as they do and quit moralizing about it (cuz all that moralizing, well, none of it means much...the creepers don't care, the lion doesn't care, why should we? Why should you?)Harbal wrote:What I disagree with is your attitude towards other sentient creatures.
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
They are backed by the authority of the state, whose role it is to protect and enforce them. Who or what is going to protect whatever "natural" rights you decide to bestow upon yourself?henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 3:35 pmAnd what of all the conventions -- human rights, legal protections & rights -- these can't mean much either, yes? How can any of these conventions mean much if, like natural rights, they're just stories we tell ourselves?
Re: A Moral Dilemma?
All "facts" are stories we tell ourselves. They are simply stories of a particular kind.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 3:35 pm
And what of all the conventions -- human rights, legal protections & rights -- these can't mean much either, yes? How can any of these conventions mean much if, like natural rights, they're just stories we tell ourselves?
All rights are just obligations on the part of other people. The "story" behind the right is that other people are obliged (legally or morally) in a particular way.
This is obvious and incontravertable.