"Speciesism" - a disgusting neologism, a specious criticim
On 4/15/2012 8:50 PM, Rupert wrote:
> On Apr 16, 5:37 am, George > wrote:
>> On 4/15/2012 8:15 PM, Rupert wrote:
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>>> On Apr 16, 5:02 am, George > wrote:
>>>> On 4/15/2012 6:41 PM, Rupert wrote:
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>>>>> On Apr 16, 3:32 am, George > wrote:
>>>>>> On 4/15/2012 6:30 PM, Rupert wrote:
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>>>>>>> On Apr 16, 2:11 am, George > wrote:
>>>>>>>> On 4/12/2012 3:05 PM, Rupert wrote:
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>>>>>>>>> On Apr 12, 6:42 pm, George > wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On 4/12/2012 8:51 AM, Rupert wrote:
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>>>>>>>>>>> On Apr 12, 6:04 am, George > wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>> On 4/11/2012 10:44 AM, Rupert wrote:
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>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Apr 11, 7:15 pm, wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The very word itself, if we can hold our noses and call it a word, is
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> disgusting. Most spell-checkers reject it as a properly spelled English
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> word. It's a revolting neologism, coined by sophists.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> One of the most obvious defects in the "ar" criticism of so-called
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "speciesism" is that it rather than say what is substantially wrong
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> with, "ar" passivists instead commit a logical fallacy, what might be
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> called the Guilt by Association or "Bad Company" fallacy. At the very
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> outset of any "ar" condemnation of "speciesism", there is an immediate
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> attempt to link it with racism and sexism, as if that's all that's
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> needed to show that "speciesism" not only is morally wrong but deeply
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> evil. In fact, the very word itself, with its "ism" suffix, is
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> deliberately - I would say cynically - intended to suggest this linkage.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> There is no escaping the fact that this is a fallacy. If someone is
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> going to say that "speciesism" is wrong, he's going to have to say why
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> it is wrong in its substance.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The comparison, however, is wrong in *its* substance. Not only is it a
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> logical fallacy to condemn "speciesism" simply by comparing it to racism
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and sexism, but the comparison is false; it doesn't stand up to
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> scrutiny. First of all, putting aside any concern about "marginal
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> cases", there *is* a general morally significant difference between
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> humans and all other species, a difference that is wholly
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> species-dependent. Humans are moral agents; no other animal species
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> contains any moral agents. That is a morally significant difference -
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> so much so, that "ar" passivists say humans are *obliged* to alter their
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> view of animals as a result of it. In other words, "ar" passivists are
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> themselves "speciesist" in condemning "speciesism". The failure of race
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> to be a morally significant separator is too obvious to require much
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> comment. Whatever moral attribute people might want to use as a
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> criterion for discrimination, race does not logically include or exclude
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> an individual. If admission to prestigious universities is to be
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> granted based on high grades and high standardized test scores, then
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> there is no valid reason to exclude someone of any given race if he has
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> sufficiently high scores. We don't need to invoke "marginal cases" to
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> see what's wrong with using race or sex as a discriminating criterion:
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> some, or perhaps even many, members of historically disadvantaged human
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> groups meet the objective criteria for inclusion.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> The second way in which the comparison fails is that racial minorities
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> and women are able to advance their own claims that they possess the
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> traits that are supposed to be the criteria for inclusion. In fact, the
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> very act of making their own claim is part of the demonstration that
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> they *do* possess those relevant traits. Other species' members cannot
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> do this - *none* of them.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> For these reasons, "speciesism" fails as a criticism of the human use of
>>>>>>>>>>>>>> animals.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> If you think that moral agency is the crucial morally relevant factor,
>>>>>>>>>>>>> then extend the same amount of consideration to all moral patients,
>>>>>>>>>>>>> human or nonhuman.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> You've given no valid reason why we should.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>> You've given no valid reason not to, and it's your job to do that.
>>
>>>>>>>>>> No, it isn't. You're proposing a massive change - it's your burden to
>>>>>>>>>> prove that we ought to make it.
>>
>>>>>>>>>> The burden is on you and the other radicals, and predictably - because
>>>>>>>>>> you're do-nothing passivists - you're shirking your burden.
>>
>>>>>>>>> My proposal above simply amounts to taking your suggestion that moral
>>>>>>>>> agency is the crucial factor seriously.
>>
>>>>>>>> As it is an attribute that only attaches to one species, it's "speciesism".
>>
>>>>>>> You don't know that it only attaches to one species
>>
>>>>>> We all know that it does.
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>>>>> No.
>>
>>>> Yes.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>> That's not speciesism.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> It's incoherent, is what it is.
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>>>>>>>>>>> Why?
>>
>>>>>>>>>> Already explained.
>>
>>>>>>>>> No.
>>
>>>>>>>> Yes - explained.
>>
>>>>>>> I am not aware
>>
>>>>>> Liar.
>>
>>>>> You have no rational grounds for thinking that I am a liar.
>>
>>>> Of course I have.
>>
>>> No, you don't. Actually, you have quite rational grounds for thinking
>>> that I am telling the truth. Because I am saying that I am not aware
>>> of you having explained why it is incoherent to extend the same amount
>>> of moral consideration to all moral patients, human or nonhuman. And
>>> you have in fact never made any attempt to explain this, so it is
>>> quite reasonable to suppose that I would not be aware of your having
>>> done so. So it is quite rational for you to believe that I am telling
>>> the truth, and not lying.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Other species don't give any consideration to the interests of
>>>>>>>>>>>> individual members of different species.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Sometimes they do but that is irrelevant.
>>
>>>>>>>>>> They never give the sort of consideration you say humans must give, and
>>>>>>>>>> it's entirely relevant. It's what shows that you are being "speciesist"
>>>>>>>>>> yourself.
>>
>>>>>>>>> Nonhuman animals can't give the same sort of consideration that humans
>>>>>>>>> give, and it's not speciesist to refuse to ask them to do something
>>>>>>>>> beyond their cognitive capacities.
>>
>>>>>>>> It *is* "speciesist" - you keep forgetting the quotes, asshole - to
>>>>>>>> demand they do something based on a species-dependent trait.
>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> Saying that we *must*, due to
>>>>>>>>>>>> some intrinsic feature of our species, is "speciesist" (always put
>>>>>>>>>>>> quotes around "speciesism" and "speciesist" to indicate they're bullshit
>>>>>>>>>>>> made-up pseudo-words.)
>>
>>>>>>>>>>> No, it's not. It's not speciesist to say that moral agents have moral
>>>>>>>>>>> obligations.
>>
>>>>>>>>>> It's "speciesist" - you forgot the quotes, you **** - to say that humans
>>>>>>>>>> are obliged to behave in a particular way based on a species-dependent
>>>>>>>>>> attribute.
>>
>>>>>>>>> That's not what is being said.
>>
>>>>>>>> That *is* what is being said.
>>
>>>>>>> Obviously only moral agents can have moral obligations.
>>
>>>>>> Not what you're saying.
>>
>>>>> Yes. It is precisely what I am saying.
>>
>>>> No, it is not.
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>>> Actually, it is.
>>
>> It isn't.
>>
>>> I am the one who gets to decide what I am saying.
>>
>> I get to interpret what you're really saying. I'm right.
>
> No, you don't get to interpret what I'm saying.
I do. I really do.
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