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Vegan (alt.food.vegan) This newsgroup exists to share ideas and issues of concern among vegans. We are always happy to share our recipes- perhaps especially with omnivores who are simply curious- or even better, accomodating a vegan guest for a meal! |
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Posted to alt.animals.ethics.vegetarian,alt.food.vegan,alt.philosophy,talk.politics.animals,alt.politics
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It has degrees; it isn't absolute. If I see my neighbor Smith's dog get
loose and attack my neighbor Jones's cat, I'll try to stop the attack and save Jones's cat. If I see Smith's dog attack a squirrel in the front yard, I probably won't try to save the squirrel; if I do try to stop the attack, it will be more out of consideration for Smith and how he wants his dog to behave. If I see a coyote come down the street and attack the squirrel, for certain I won't do anything to try to save the squirrel. The squirrel simply doesn't enter into my imprecise calculus of moral consideration in the same way that Jones's cat does, and to the extent it enters into it at all, it's highly context-dependent. No one gives equal moral consideration to the interests of all beings capable of suffering, nor should we be expected to do so. We may not be able to say exactly where we draw lines, but that doesn't mean it's arbitrary. In any case, the "ar" radicals tell us that arbitrariness sometimes doesn't matter, or sometimes it does, so they are being arbitrary. For example, I am told that it is permissible for me to take my kinship with my child into account in deciding whether to rescue him or some other child from an impending catastrophe where I have time to rescue only one of them. However, the same source would tell me that if neither of the two children were my known relatives, but if one were of my race and the other were of a different race, I would not be able to use race - also an indication of kinship, even if much more remotely so than family - in deciding which one to rescue. The sophists are trying somehow, any way they can, to find a means to salvage something they intuitively like. There is no rigor to it at all. |
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