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05-14-2010, 10:52 AM | #481 (permalink) | ||
Juicious Maximus III
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Scabb Island
Posts: 6,525
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You write yourself that punishment can have positive effect in that it can prevent more crime. Isn't that also a notion behind punishment?
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05-14-2010, 11:50 AM | #483 (permalink) |
Account Disabled
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Scotland
Posts: 4,483
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^They can be annoying but I appreciate their views
Anyway I agree with vegetarianism and would love to be vegetarian but right now I couldn't do it maybe when i'm older i'll make more of an effort and become one. |
05-14-2010, 12:02 PM | #486 (permalink) |
Account Disabled
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: The Eyrie, Vale of Arryn, Westeros
Posts: 3,234
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It's not the same.
PETA pretty much ****s vegetarians/vegans/other animal rights activists over with their ridiculous antics. To be perfectly honest, I think PETA demonstrations should be outlawed, as it interferes with the human right to choose what we put into our bodies, and are generally ****ing annoying. I don't want anyone righties telling me what to do with my uterus, but I also don't want PETA telling me what is "right" for me to eat or not. The main thing is, I choose to be vegetarian, no one should be forced or made to feel bad for the fact they eat meat. |
05-14-2010, 01:42 PM | #489 (permalink) | ||
Groupie
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Sweden
Posts: 42
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Would the suffering of the animal be equal in both the cases I would say that the moral implications of both scenarios would be equal. In fact, I would argue that, given the conditions that in both cases the corpse of the animal is treated likewise, the best, most moral scenario would be the one with the sadist as he/she recieves pleasure from the action. This is under the condition that it is a lone, isolated event and that the pleasure that the sadist recieves does not mean that he/she has had positive experiences on animal cruelty making him/her more likely to perform it again. (This, I would say, is likely the case.) Quote:
When saying that, I am making the assumption (a justified one, if you ask me, but that's just me) that: A1: Crime causes an increase in unhappiness/pain and a decrease in happiness/pleasure. (This would of course depend on the specific crime, I would argue that some legal actions are still immoral and some illegal ones are moral.) Hence: A2: Less crime means less increase in unhappiness/pain and less decrease in happiness/pain. Per my system of morality: positive consequences. B: Punishment works in a preventive matter by eg. scaring people into not commiting crimes or stating an example. (Of course punishment isn't enough, we also need eg. theraphy.) Due to A2, these are positive consequences. |
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05-14-2010, 06:53 PM | #490 (permalink) | |||||
Facilitator
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Where people kill 30 million pigs per year
Posts: 2,014
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Your basic question appears to be this: how do we determine which beings are ones we should be concerned about and try not to kill? I feel this is a really important question and is at the crux of the vegetarian/meat-eating debate. It sounds like you feel we should care only about those beings who are "self-aware." How are you defining "self-aware," hip hop bunny hop? I feel most animals whom people eat (mammals, birds, and fish) are very self-aware in that they feel their bodies and their emotions. For example, a dog certainly feels her own mouth inside (as we do), and she feels her feet and legs move and is aware of the sensations. Dogs and parrots also appear to be able to experience depression, since dogs and parrots who have symptoms of depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder recover when given Prozac, the same drug that works on people. Also, I'd like to point out that a young human baby, say a 1-month-old, does not appear more self-aware than adult livestock animals...and actually less so in some ways. People used to think very young human babies couldn't experience pain, since little babies' brains are still rewiring quite a bit and babies don't *appear* to be very aware of what's going on. Some people seem to have similar beliefs (which I feel are false) about non-human animals such as cows, pigs, chickens, fish, etc. I feel that how an animal dies, whether peacefully in a field or chased down and ripped apart by a predator, makes a big difference to an animal like a rabbit! I am curious why you think the type of death would *not* make a difference. It sounds like you feel rabbits are unfeeling machines. Quote:
However, I don't feel it is a morally good thing for bystanders to stand by and then benefit from an animal experiencing fear and pain at the hands of other humans and their machines. I don't think most people who eat other animals and their body parts *want* those animals to experience fear and pain...but they accept this suffering. I suspect many people discount the importance of animals' pain, since humans can't feel it. This doesn't make meat-eaters sadists. But it does make them people who stand by and do nothing when someone else, an animal, is frightened and then killed. Quote:
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