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In the scientific classification scheme that's true but in all important contexts humans are not animals. I'm sure that you've walked through doors labeled "no animals allowed" on countless occasions. Hence you know that you, who are human, are not an animal.Humans are animals. Of the genus homo and the species sapien.
Reading, writing, and the other things that I mentioned in post #3 are indicators of a higher station on the great chain of being, while ability to kill with a single bite is not. Therefore there's no equivalence between your example and the evidence I offered for the higher nature of humanity. (Further, of course, rattlesnakes can't remark on that, nor can they remark on anything; they can't talk.)It's like a rattlesnake remarking on humans lack of endurance and inability to kill with a single bite.
Reading, writing, and the other things that I mentioned in post #3 are indicators of a higher station on the great chain of being, while ability to kill with a single bite is not.
Yeah right, labels on doors is all we need for an education.In the scientific classification scheme that's true but in all important contexts humans are not animals. I'm sure that you've walked through doors labeled "no animals allowed" on countless occasions. Hence you know that you, who are human, are not an animal.
Reading, writing, and the other things that I mentioned in post #3 are indicators of a higher station on the great chain of being, while ability to kill with a single bite is not. Therefore there's no equivalence between your example and the evidence I offered for the higher nature of humanity. (Further, of course, rattlesnakes can't remark on that, nor can they remark on anything; they can't talk.)
In a way this conversation always seems to me utterly inane. Animals at times roll around in the mud, roll around in their own poo, eat their own poo, kill and eat their own children, &c... &c... If you're honestly not able to find any meaningful differences that raise humans above that level, that gives me an extremely strong reason to desire to avoid acquiring your way of thought.
In the scientific classification scheme that's true but in all important contexts humans are not animals. I'm sure that you've walked through doors labeled "no animals allowed" on countless occasions. Hence you know that you, who are human, are not an animal.
And personally I think the opposite. If scientific textbooks were changed to redefine humans as a new kingdom of living things tomorrow it would not directly impact my life in any way. By contrast, if it were decided in real and meaningful contexts that humans were animals then I'd no longer be able to go shopping, eat in restaurants, go to the bank or the post office or the library, etc... Those things seem to me to be extremely important.That depends heavily on what you consider important. Personally, I consider scientific classification more important, in the general scheme of life, than what sorts of creatures are allowed in a 7-11.
If you had an animal's body and brain you would not be able to type, nor watch a video, etc... If all of us had only animal brains and animals bodies then nobody would ever have invented computers, videos, or anything else. How many patents are held by monkeys? How many inventions are accredited to cows? How many posts on this message board or any other are typed by walruses?Also, for example, if my cells had rigid walls and I didn't have muscles, I wouldn't be able to type; if I had no brain, I wouldn't be able to enjoy the video I'm watching or the rain outside, and if nobody had brains, then this computer wouldn't be here in the first place. In the vast, vast majority of things that I consider important, being an animal is an intrinsic part of the experience. I experience it through my animal body and perceive it through my animal brain. What else could be more important to a person's life than everything they experience, everything they think, everything they remember and everything they feel? In fact, when considering a person's life, what else is there, at all?
If that were the case we would prosecute any animal for murder if they killed a human. But of course killing a human is only a crime when commited by another human.selfinflikted said:The only reason a human life is of any greater value is because we, as humans, place that value there.
Hmm ... that depends where we think morality comes from. I'm not sure it's an entirely human contruct.FennyTheFox said:But how can we compare our morality -a human construct- with that of other species?
Are you arguing that "We understand how the environment works, therefore we should take care of it?" Because if so then most animals would have the same responsibilities as humans - many animals have a deep intimate knowledge of their environment, deeper than humans have, but they don't have the same obligations to the planet and to other species that humans do.FennyTheFox said:I believe our responsibility does not stem from a moral subjective, but from our placement in an order. We have the capacity to do these things - to care for the welfare of Earth and other species - not because we are 'more morally upstanding", but because we have taken the place of this position. We have advanced far enough that we, as a species, are able to influence the environment as such - a consequence of our continued expanding and colonizing combined with our advanced capacities in other areas.
But ants don't do such a thing as classifying, do they? You're dismissing my argument on the grounds that it's a human standard and not a universal standard, but you're not saying what standard you'd use instead. The only standards existing are God's standard and a human standard. (You presumably don't care for God's standard.) So if you don't employ a human standard, doesn't that mean that you'll cease to exist intellectually at all?According to which standard? Oh, that's right: the human standard!
But why should that be some kind of absolute standard of greatness?
It isn't.
Humans are animals, because humans make this classification. Humans are not animals, because again humans make that classification. There is no absolute standard. There is no absolute "higher" or "lower". There is only difference.
Humans are the only existing biological organisms that are... human. In the same way, ants are the only existing biological organisms that are antish. Humans are extremly bad at being ants, and vice versa.
So on the antish classification (if ants did such a human thing as classifying) humans would be "lower" than ants.
Are you arguing that "We understand how the environment works, therefore we should take care of it?" Because if so then most animals would have the same responsibilities as humans - many animals have a deep intimate knowledge of their environment, deeper than humans have, but they don't have the same obligations to the planet and to other species that humans do.
You are still missing the point.If you had an animal's body and brain you would not be able to type, nor watch a video, etc... If all of us had only animal brains and animals bodies then nobody would ever have invented computers, videos, or anything else. How many patents are held by monkeys? How many inventions are accredited to cows? How many posts on this message board or any other are typed by walruses?
Well, you don't know if ants do anything like that, or anything comparable to that. You just assume that they don't. (Well, I do assume the same, but I don't try to derive an absolute standard from that.)But ants don't do such a thing as classifying, do they? You're dismissing my argument on the grounds that it's a human standard and not a universal standard, but you're not saying what standard you'd use instead. The only standards existing are God's standard and a human standard. (You presumably don't care for God's standard.) So if you don't employ a human standard, doesn't that mean that you'll cease to exist intellectually at all?
No, the problem is that there isn't a universal standard. So you cannot use one. So you have to use a human one.Think about this. You dismiss my argument on the grounds that I'm using a human standard rather than a universal standard. According to your own logic, shouldn't you be dismissed for using a human standard rather than a universal standard. After all, rabbits don't demand a universal standard for their arguments. Porcupines don't complain that a certain standard is unique to one species.
My mistake.FennyTheFox said:That is not what I said.
FennyTheFox said:Our responsibility arises from our very use of our environment. We farm and destroy land, we develop land and throw off balances of prey-predator, we minimize species populations that conflict with us and our livestock and our farms. The list goes on of the uses and misuses of environment -our influence on it- that we take part in. So we have the responsibility to repair that land and environment that we use (or misuse, in many cases).
Both in our interest and in the greater interest of the ecosystem as a whole.
I'm gonna whiteknight for AlexBPTo put the question simply - do we expect animals to act like us? Is it fair to dress a chimp us in human clothes, give him human snacks and generally treat him as we would a toddler? Or is better to let him live in the jungle (or an enclosure) with other chimps? If animals are our equals why don't we treat as we would treat people?
Men are masters over the rest of creation. Just because something is subordinate to you does not mean that they/it are to be treated shamefully or without respect.
In the scientific classification scheme that's true but in all important contexts humans are not animals.
I'm sure that you've walked through doors labeled "no animals allowed" on countless occasions. Hence you know that you, who are human, are not an animal.
Our perceptions don't matter. In the eye of the universe, we are just another biological organism that fits in the kingdom of animalia.
The universe is completely indifferent to our existence. If anything, most of the universe is extremely hostile to life.