Log In   or  Sign Up for Free

Philosophy Discussion Forums | A Humans-Only Club for Open-Minded Discussion & Debate

Humans-Only Club for Discussion & Debate

A one-of-a-kind oasis of intelligent, in-depth, productive, civil debate.

Topics are uncensored, meaning even extremely controversial viewpoints can be presented and argued for, but our Forum Rules strictly require all posters to stay on-topic and never engage in ad hominems or personal attacks.


Discuss morality and ethics in this message board.
Featured Article: Philosophical Analysis of Abortion, The Right to Life, and Murder
#385335
Sy Borg wrote: May 26th, 2021, 2:23 am Ideally, the pig should be tortured for an extended period, filled with growth hormones, and live in its own excrement so the growers can add lots of lovely antibiotics.

Mmm mmm.
If you like that sort of thing, go for it.
I'd rather have some meat that has taste.
#385342
Pattern-chaser wrote:My personal feeling is that there is little point in complaining about the eating of other living creatures when most living creatures do this, and always have done this, to survive. It is a fact of the world, and to complain about it is to complain about the sun being too bright, or too dim. It just is.
Steve3007 wrote: May 26th, 2021, 5:14 am This might seem like an obvious point, but the sun doesn't have a brightness control.
No, it's just the example I chose of something that is part of life, the universe and everything; it just is. If we make moral value judgements on it, we're wasting our time. It's not subject to our whims or wishes; it won't change because we want it to. It does what it does regardless of us. That's why I chose it as an example.

Steve3007 wrote: May 26th, 2021, 5:14 am Our diet does. We can choose what we eat.
Yes, but we don't choose NOT to eat. We need to eat something or we'll die. What does it matter if we choose to eat other living things, animal or plant, when most other living things do the same? Can we really get on our moral high horses and condemn the consumption of other living things, when this very practice is a basic feature of nearly all the life on our planet? That would be arrogant, and pointless too, IMO.


Steve3007 wrote: May 26th, 2021, 5:14 am I think we should be honest and say: I am willing for other animals to live lives of misery because I enjoy the taste of their flesh, not because of any argument as to what is or is not the natural way of things.
Ah, now you introduce how we treat the animals we eat, before we kill and eat them. A different but related issue, just as important. I prefer to be honest and say: I am willing for other animals to be humanely kept and killed, so that I can eat their flesh, so that I can survive and thrive. This is in accord with "the natural way of things".

The pictures Sy Borg posted are horrible. There is no need to treat our food animals in this way. Only our greed for profit causes us to act so. If we could only address the greed and the profit, I suspect all other issues might right themselves. 🤔
Favorite Philosopher: Cratylus Location: England
#385401
Steve3007 wrote: May 26th, 2021, 5:26 am
Belindi wrote:Food is too cheap.
Yes, meat particularly. Like a lot of things it's artificially cheap in the sense that the economics of it treat certain things as cost-free. The trouble is, it's very difficult to fight against economics, particularly when it's global. If you tell a poor hard working family that food (or specifically meat) is artificially cheap they'll probably, quite reasonably, fight back against that.
I wanted to write about how there is too much difference between rich and poor but I have no real solution other than a religious one.

I wonder if popular culture can come to the rescue with poor people rebelling against the conspicuous consumption of the rich, instead of trying to imitate it. What went wrong with communism?
#385402
There is a massive ecological crisis, not much talked about, but as you might imagine, caused mostly by humans.
And that is the lack of SH1T.
Since the end of the Iceage there is an estimated reduction in the amount of 90% of excrement. Excrement is one of the essential pathways by which the natural cycles all must pass. It is a choke point, through which nitrogen passes and represents a significant food supply for trillions of bacteria, worms (from the mocroscopic to the macroscopic), and a host of invertebrates.
This reduction is by land and sea.
It was once thought that the massive holocaust in the whale population might lead to an increase in Krill. Sadly this has not happened, as whale **** once supplied a massive ecological pathway upon which the Krill themselves were utterly dependant. So along with the drop in whale numbers os a parallel drop in the number of krill and an entire biome who that was dependant on the ****/krill/whale sequence.
The large mammals that were common at the end of the iceage ranged from bears, european rhinos, elephants, big cats wolves, several species of deer, even beaver were present in Britain. The natural landscape offered a bewildering number of **** making creatures who enriched the soil and made the carbon collecting plants grow.
All that has fallen under the sentence of extinction, under the plough or under urban developement.
Now the spaces between the Cities, towns and villages, where not turned to plough are wretched remnants of their former glory.
This destruction is across the face of the earth. Even in places that seem wild or untouched, the numbers of species has plummeted, squeezed into ever more small areas.

Wee need more ****. The land needs to return to at least a simulation of the natural world, and that means plants and ANIMALS too.
Arable land is the ecosystem's worst nightware. Deep ploughed, reliant of agro-chemicals from pesticides, herbicides, and fertilisers. Soil has washed awas and been replaced by the annual innundation of nitrates which pollute the water supply and clog waterways with weeds, choking the fish.

We need more naturally grown meat; and horticulturally grown, rather than agriculturally grown, vegetables.
#385435
Sculptor1 wrote: May 27th, 2021, 4:33 am There is a massive ecological crisis, not much talked about, but as you might imagine, caused mostly by humans.
And that is the lack of SH1T.
Since the end of the Iceage...
This is interesting, and it sounds plausible. Why haven't I heard of this before? Are there links, or whatever, that you know of?

💩💩💩
Favorite Philosopher: Cratylus Location: England
#385437
Pattern-chaser wrote:The pictures Sy Borg posted are horrible. There is no need to treat our food animals in this way. Only our greed for profit causes us to act so. If we could only address the greed and the profit, I suspect all other issues might right themselves. 🤔
Trouble is, if you look into it a bit, you find that it's a picture of pregnant sows in a thing called a "gestation crate" and then you find arguments on both sides. For example, you even find people claiming that studies have shown that the pregnant sows choose to go into those little spaces when given the chance to go somewhere bigger. I'm not saying I believe them. But one of the many issues in the moral maze which is animal rights/welfare is the one of anthropomorphism. It's difficult for us not to look at pictures and simply think "how would I like it if I were in that situation?". If taken to extremes, this kind of anthropomorphic empathy leads to the craziness of thinking that blades of grass consciously concern themselves with human agricultural habits.
#385443
Pattern-chaser wrote: May 27th, 2021, 10:13 am
Sculptor1 wrote: May 27th, 2021, 4:33 am There is a massive ecological crisis, not much talked about, but as you might imagine, caused mostly by humans.
And that is the lack of SH1T.
Since the end of the Iceage...
This is interesting, and it sounds plausible. Why haven't I heard of this before? Are there links, or whatever, that you know of?

💩💩💩
It's a thing that came up on recently QI on the BBC. I've not dipped into the evidence ytet, but you can be sure it has some basis. I'll let you know when I find out more.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0380136/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1
#385468
Steve3007 wrote: May 27th, 2021, 10:20 am
Pattern-chaser wrote:The pictures Sy Borg posted are horrible. There is no need to treat our food animals in this way. Only our greed for profit causes us to act so. If we could only address the greed and the profit, I suspect all other issues might right themselves. 🤔
Trouble is, if you look into it a bit, you find that it's a picture of pregnant sows in a thing called a "gestation crate" and then you find arguments on both sides. For example, you even find people claiming that studies have shown that the pregnant sows choose to go into those little spaces when given the chance to go somewhere bigger. I'm not saying I believe them. But one of the many issues in the moral maze which is animal rights/welfare is the one of anthropomorphism. It's difficult for us not to look at pictures and simply think "how would I like it if I were in that situation?". If taken to extremes, this kind of anthropomorphic empathy leads to the craziness of thinking that blades of grass consciously concern themselves with human agricultural habits.
The lies about gestation crates may be based on the same faulty claims about hens choosing to stay in barns, even after the door is open. By the same token, inmates who have been incarcerated since youth will often commit crimes to go back to environs to which they have been conditioned.

If pigs preferred to spend their lives within tiny cages, why do they not live even remotely like that in the wild? Wild pigs could simply find a niche or dig a hole and spend their lives the way pig factory farmers claim they like it. Instead, they run around, scavenging, hunting, fighting, playing and trying to have sex. You know, like any other intelligent mammal will do - even humans!

Sadly, if you suggest that an intelligent mammal with a complex nervous system has any emotions or displays any creative intelligence, there will always be someone to claim anthropomorphism, as if humans were the only beings ever to experience their lives. That was a respectable idea about a century ago. So were the ideas that the Milky Way was the only galaxy and that black holes did not exist.
#385478
Pigs need environmental richness to be happy even or especially when they are pregnant. They are at least as intelligent as dogs. We who eat bacon have no moral superiority over those Chinese peasants who eat dog meat.

If you are going to eat meat you should regard it as an occasional luxury and if possible insist it is outdoor bred, reared, and naturally fattened, and killed within twelve miles of its field.

What went wrong with communism that was supposed to distribute luxuries equally?
#385480
Sy Borg wrote:Sadly, if you suggest that an intelligent mammal with a complex nervous system has any emotions or displays any creative intelligence, there will always be someone to claim anthropomorphism, as if humans were the only beings ever to experience their lives.
Humans are of course not the only beings to experience their lives, but I think instances of inapplicable anthropomorphism still do exist. I think this from personal experience of my own attitudes, apart from anything else. I think empathy is a mixed blessing. On the plus side, I believe it's the key emotion that we use in creating the moral codes that we believe in and aspire to live by. Without it, we're psychopaths. On the downside, as with any analogy, it can be overstretched. I've definitely found myself overstretching it when trying to assess the wellbeing of family pets (goldish, rabbit, cat). It's particularly difficult to use empathy to figure out whether a goldfish is living a fulfilling life, I've found.


But I accept the points you make in the rest of the post about those "gestation crates".
#385501
Steve3007 wrote: May 28th, 2021, 7:21 am Error: "Sounds like a queue for a new topic." should be "Sounds like a cue for a new topic.".

Your wish is my command! 😉 Follow the link to the new topic:
Pattern-chaser wrote: May 28th, 2021, 9:17 am What went wrong with communism?
Favorite Philosopher: Cratylus Location: England
#385516
Steve3007 wrote: May 28th, 2021, 11:00 am
Pattern-chaser wrote:Your wish is my command! 😉 Follow the link to the new topic:
Thanks! I suppose I should say, form an orderly cue. I mean queue.
🙂 For those who aren't used to following those little tiny up-arrow links, here is a 'normal' link. Having said that, I hope it works, as I won't be able to edit or delete this post. [😡]
Favorite Philosopher: Cratylus Location: England
  • 1
  • 33
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 44

Current Philosophy Book of the Month

The Riddle of Alchemy

The Riddle of Alchemy
by Paul Kiritsis
January 2025

2025 Philosophy Books of the Month

On Spirits: The World Hidden Volume II

On Spirits: The World Hidden Volume II
by Dr. Joseph M. Feagan
April 2025

Escape to Paradise and Beyond (Tentative)

Escape to Paradise and Beyond (Tentative)
by Maitreya Dasa
March 2025

They Love You Until You Start Thinking for Yourself

They Love You Until You Start Thinking for Yourself
by Monica Omorodion Swaida
February 2025

The Riddle of Alchemy

The Riddle of Alchemy
by Paul Kiritsis
January 2025

2024 Philosophy Books of the Month

Connecting the Dots: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Science

Connecting the Dots: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Science
by Lia Russ
December 2024

The Advent of Time: A Solution to the Problem of Evil...

The Advent of Time: A Solution to the Problem of Evil...
by Indignus Servus
November 2024

Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age

Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age
by Elliott B. Martin, Jr.
October 2024

Zen and the Art of Writing

Zen and the Art of Writing
by Ray Hodgson
September 2024

How is God Involved in Evolution?

How is God Involved in Evolution?
by Joe P. Provenzano, Ron D. Morgan, and Dan R. Provenzano
August 2024

Launchpad Republic: America's Entrepreneurial Edge and Why It Matters

Launchpad Republic: America's Entrepreneurial Edge and Why It Matters
by Howard Wolk
July 2024

Quest: Finding Freddie: Reflections from the Other Side

Quest: Finding Freddie: Reflections from the Other Side
by Thomas Richard Spradlin
June 2024

Neither Safe Nor Effective

Neither Safe Nor Effective
by Dr. Colleen Huber
May 2024

Now or Never

Now or Never
by Mary Wasche
April 2024

Meditations

Meditations
by Marcus Aurelius
March 2024

Beyond the Golden Door: Seeing the American Dream Through an Immigrant's Eyes

Beyond the Golden Door: Seeing the American Dream Through an Immigrant's Eyes
by Ali Master
February 2024

The In-Between: Life in the Micro

The In-Between: Life in the Micro
by Christian Espinosa
January 2024

2023 Philosophy Books of the Month

Entanglement - Quantum and Otherwise

Entanglement - Quantum and Otherwise
by John K Danenbarger
January 2023

Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul

Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul
by Mitzi Perdue
February 2023

Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness

Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness
by Chet Shupe
March 2023

The Unfakeable Code®

The Unfakeable Code®
by Tony Jeton Selimi
April 2023

The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are

The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are
by Alan Watts
May 2023

Killing Abel

Killing Abel
by Michael Tieman
June 2023

Reconfigurement: Reconfiguring Your Life at Any Stage and Planning Ahead

Reconfigurement: Reconfiguring Your Life at Any Stage and Planning Ahead
by E. Alan Fleischauer
July 2023

First Survivor: The Impossible Childhood Cancer Breakthrough

First Survivor: The Impossible Childhood Cancer Breakthrough
by Mark Unger
August 2023

Predictably Irrational

Predictably Irrational
by Dan Ariely
September 2023

Artwords

Artwords
by Beatriz M. Robles
November 2023

Fireproof Happiness: Extinguishing Anxiety & Igniting Hope

Fireproof Happiness: Extinguishing Anxiety & Igniting Hope
by Dr. Randy Ross
December 2023

2022 Philosophy Books of the Month

Emotional Intelligence At Work

Emotional Intelligence At Work
by Richard M Contino & Penelope J Holt
January 2022

Free Will, Do You Have It?

Free Will, Do You Have It?
by Albertus Kral
February 2022

My Enemy in Vietnam

My Enemy in Vietnam
by Billy Springer
March 2022

2X2 on the Ark

2X2 on the Ark
by Mary J Giuffra, PhD
April 2022

The Maestro Monologue

The Maestro Monologue
by Rob White
May 2022

What Makes America Great

What Makes America Great
by Bob Dowell
June 2022

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!

The Truth Is Beyond Belief!
by Jerry Durr
July 2022

Living in Color

Living in Color
by Mike Murphy
August 2022 (tentative)

The Not So Great American Novel

The Not So Great American Novel
by James E Doucette
September 2022

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches

Mary Jane Whiteley Coggeshall, Hicksite Quaker, Iowa/National Suffragette And Her Speeches
by John N. (Jake) Ferris
October 2022

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All

In It Together: The Beautiful Struggle Uniting Us All
by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
November 2022

The Smartest Person in the Room: The Root Cause and New Solution for Cybersecurity

The Smartest Person in the Room
by Christian Espinosa
December 2022

2021 Philosophy Books of the Month

The Biblical Clock: The Untold Secrets Linking the Universe and Humanity with God's Plan

The Biblical Clock
by Daniel Friedmann
March 2021

Wilderness Cry: A Scientific and Philosophical Approach to Understanding God and the Universe

Wilderness Cry
by Dr. Hilary L Hunt M.D.
April 2021

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute: Tools To Spark Your Dream And Ignite Your Follow-Through

Fear Not, Dream Big, & Execute
by Jeff Meyer
May 2021

Surviving the Business of Healthcare: Knowledge is Power

Surviving the Business of Healthcare
by Barbara Galutia Regis M.S. PA-C
June 2021

Winning the War on Cancer: The Epic Journey Towards a Natural Cure

Winning the War on Cancer
by Sylvie Beljanski
July 2021

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream

Defining Moments of a Free Man from a Black Stream
by Dr Frank L Douglas
August 2021

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts

If Life Stinks, Get Your Head Outta Your Buts
by Mark L. Wdowiak
September 2021

The Preppers Medical Handbook

The Preppers Medical Handbook
by Dr. William W Forgey M.D.
October 2021

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress: A Practical Guide

Natural Relief for Anxiety and Stress
by Dr. Gustavo Kinrys, MD
November 2021

Dream For Peace: An Ambassador Memoir

Dream For Peace
by Dr. Ghoulem Berrah
December 2021


Do justifiable crimes exist?

Crime contains intent but "Self-defense is a[…]

Emergence can't do that!!

I made the inference from the grain of wheat that […]

Sy Borg, With no offence to amorphos_ii, I am su[…]

The way in which your tactile nose is beyond the h[…]