Got to say this is probably one of my favourite posts, someone who is using pure logic, and they disagrees with me *squeeeeel* this is going to be fun.CrystalShadow said:Of course it's extreme. But following things through to their logical conclusion is almost inevitably absurd.Jammy2003 said:Oh come now, with that logic there is no point in doing anything at all. That's a ridiculous extrapolation and can be done in reverse, to suggest that if living causes suffering then why be compassionate to anything? Why have a dog, cat or family? Why not eat them?CrystalShadow said:Mmm. The plant issue is a tricky one. Because it betrays the fact that vegans essentially seem to be anthropocentric.
Who says a plant doesn't feel pain? On what grounds can this be asserted other than an inference based on biology and the nature of how human beings feel pain.
To be honest, can you even say breaking a rock into pieces to build a house doesn't hurt the rock?
Pretty much everything we eat was raised for that sole purpose.
Animals just happen to be cuter, and easier to understand because we are animals ourselves.
That doesn't mean plants, (or indeed inanimate objects) don't suffer as a result of what we do to them. Merely that if they do, we are less capable of recognising the suffering.
Still... I thought this through myself and came to the conclusion that being vegetarian or vegan for those reasons was problematic, and, honestly, a little egocentric.
I don't like causing suffering, but the fact remains that me being alive comes at the expense of other living and non-living things. There's no way around this, and presuming the suffering of animals is more important than that of anything else doesn't make sense to me.
That's not to say nothing can be done at all, just that I think vegetarianism doesn't really solve much in that regard.
That's one of the problems with logic.
The reverse case that you are pointing out is just as true, but does not negate the point.
Either way, what you choose to show compassion for, and what you don't is pretty arbitrary.
I mean, why is it OK to cause obvious harm to one thing, but not another?
Who decided that?
Well, as it happens, when you look at it, there may be a few exceptions here and there, but at the end of the day it seems to come down to compassion being proportional to how similar something is to you personally.
I can't argue with the feelings behind that, but it hardly seems a particularly fair way to judge what gets to live and what gets to die.
Ok, I do see a logical flaw in your extreme situation, it's that just because it would be nearly impossible to to execute such ideology practically then you abandon it completely, while compromise is the braking of a logical chain drawing your line in the sand isn't always a bad thing, at least you can be near or even just halfway toward the logical ideal rather than saying screw it and abandoning that path all together. Alternatively people could take a que from Rorschach an "Never compromise, even in the face of Armageddon" and keep striving for the ideal rather than abandoning it, which is what I try to do in life, not always successfully, but still.
A line I think I first heard for a Karate Kid movie was,
"when do I get to smash rocks"
"why do you what to smash rocks? what have they ever done to you?"
from that day I haven't caused intentional damage to any inanimate objects.
Sorry for the windedness at the beginning of the post. It just seems increasingly rare to find logical people on the internet.