puredingo wrote:"Not done with them"???.....How about taking a bit of responsibility for yourself for a start!
earthling wrote:It amazes me that humans first port of call when something is done to them or their 'property' by another species of animal is to kill it. Humans scientific name 'Homo sapiens' means 'wise or thinking man'. If a species first thought at 'wrong doing' is to kill, then that has nothing to do with wisdom or thinking, but much more primitive urges.
puredingo wrote:Homo selfious...would be also be apt. Meaning a specie which soley values the individual without consideration of the comfort or survival of any other type or even it's own.
maddog wrote:earthling wrote:It amazes me that humans first port of call when something is done to them or their 'property' by another species of animal is to kill it. Humans scientific name 'Homo sapiens' means 'wise or thinking man'. If a species first thought at 'wrong doing' is to kill, then that has nothing to do with wisdom or thinking, but much more primitive urges.puredingo wrote:Homo selfious...would be also be apt. Meaning a specie which soley values the individual without consideration of the comfort or survival of any other type or even it's own.
Are we to believe wild animals are more sentimental and generous of spirit than humans? Here I was thinking that survival was a natural instinct of individuals regardless of their species.
Cheers
Earthling wrote:maddog wrote:earthling wrote:It amazes me that humans first port of call when something is done to them or their 'property' by another species of animal is to kill it. Humans scientific name 'Homo sapiens' means 'wise or thinking man'. If a species first thought at 'wrong doing' is to kill, then that has nothing to do with wisdom or thinking, but much more primitive urges.puredingo wrote:Homo selfious...would be also be apt. Meaning a specie which solely values the individual without consideration of the comfort or survival of any other type or even it's own.
Are we to believe wild animals are more sentimental and generous of spirit than humans? Here I was thinking that survival was a natural instinct of individuals regardless of their species.
Cheers
I cannot see where I have said other species are 'more sentimental and generous of spirit than humans'. You are correct in your belief that survival is a natural instinct of individuals regardless of their species.
However, Humans have called themselves the scientific name 'Homo sapiens' which in latin means 'wise or thinking man'. When humans named themselves this it was because they believed themselves above animal instincts and prided themselves on using reason and wisdom to solve problems rather than their natural instincts.
If they were this once the majority are no more and its now back to natural instincts of survival of the fittest. Hence the reason for a name change for Homo sapiens...
maddog wrote:Perhaps the wise bit is deserved as we have the ability to debate subjects unrelated to survival or comfort, to read and write, to theorise over mathematics, science, morality and philosophy, to record history, to have religious superstition, etc. Have we observed other animals do any of these things?
Other animals attack and kill to eat to defend themselves, often launching brutal pre-emptive strikes against a perceived though not immediate threat, as do humans. The difference in this regard is that we may doubt that we should, sometimes even for food (for example moral vegetarians). Other animals suffer no such uncertainty. Surely such doubt can be describe as a sentimentality and generosity of spirit - another trait lacking in many of the lower animals, and further confirming our status as the 'wise' or 'thinking' species.
Cheers
Earthling wrote:Maybe we need a sub-species for the humans that are evolving morally/ethically and the ones that are being left behind?
Earthling wrote:You say animals suffer no such uncertainty as to doubting their actions. How can this me measured by humans? Until other species talk human or humans talk other animals language this will never be answered.
maddog wrote:Earthling wrote:You say animals suffer no such uncertainty as to doubting their actions. How can this me measured by humans? Until other species talk human or humans talk other animals language this will never be answered.
We have managed to effectively communicate with many other animals, so this is no barrier for measurement. We have also benefited from observation. If humans had, as examples, observed a ethical vegan lion movement, a gazelle generously assist hungry hyenas by offering a feast of its young, or chimpanzees conscientiously object and abstain from attacking a neighbouring troop, it would be fair to say that they too had reached the enlightened state.
Earthling wrote:Saying humans have managed effective communication is perhaps going a bit toooo far. Have humans communicated from a worker bee as to what its feeling/thoughts are about its life/job? Or how a Dingo feels when it has all its pups suckling for the first time? Observation doesn’t cut it. 30 years ago humans had one book on the subject, now they have more, but still way less than needed for a good understanding on the subject. I’ve read a dozen or so and so far humans have no evidence as to what a bee thinks about their life. There is very basic observations, but no real knowledge.
Earthling wrote:As to a saying a carnivore needs to go vegan to show an enlightened state….Mmmmm…I guess your inferring that humans are at an enlightened state. Unfortunately even fewer humans are enlightened compared to those humans leading somewhat ethical lives.
Earthling wrote:Compassion is certainly one of the ‘enlightened states’ and many animals have shown this. Stories of Dolphins showing compassion by saving sailors abound, elephants and their compassion to one another and their deceased, a gorilla showing compassion by rescuing a hurt bird at a zoo. Even further, monkeys and apes can make judgments about fairness, offer altruistic help and empathize when another species is ill or in difficulties. These are all from observations and some basic communication, but far from effective communication.
Earthling wrote:But given time humans will get better with communicating with other species and when a Dingo can tell humans what it feels/thinks when trapped in a ‘humane’ leg trap with strychnine-laced cloths slowly poisoning it to death….hopefully (if not before) that’s when real changes will occur.
maddog wrote:Earthling, although I have not read a dozen or more books on the subject, I would hazard a guess that a worker bee has very few feelings or thoughts on its job, as it is a lower order animal focused on the task at hand. As for the Dingo *&%$#!, I would suggest she feels maternal.
I made no claim that a carnivore need to go vegan to show an enlightened state. I merely suggested that if there were any evidence of carnivores adopting such a lifestyle for ethical reasons, we may consider that the species is demonstrating an aspect of higher order behaviour, for which homo sapiens can be distinguished from the lower order animals. They may alternatively demonstrate an understanding of subjects of equal or greater worth (such as mathematics, engineering, philosophy, the natural sciences, literature, etc), or perhaps even master a number of different fields of theoretical knowledge, and they too may qualify as 'wise'.
I agree that many, perhaps most, mammals are capable of demonstrating compassion. Though none have done so to the degree of homo sapiens. While the human too can demonstrate concern for an individual in distress, we also expended considerable efforts to further the welfare of populations that we often have had no direct contact (e.g. overseas aid to Africa), or the protection of species and ecosystems that we may never have seen (e.g. the Polar Bear or Antartica). No other species has managed to demonstrate such a degree of empathy or awareness for other organisms, let alone across continents.
Unless of course that there is very little moral difference to humans trapping or poisoning an animal in order to secure what it perceives as its interest, and a dog (or cat, crocodile, etc) trapping or killing another animal in order to further its own interest. Homo sapiens can act with cruelty to rival any animal, but we have the capacities for thought that make us the highest order animal, and often our cruelty is driven by this capacity (e.g. culling). The dog has little more than its instinct, its dinner, its emotion, its pack, and its territory.
Cheers
maddog wrote:I second the apologies.
First, ethical behaviour and compassion are two indicators of higher life forms (e.g. mammals). Perhaps they are necessary, but I do not propose that they alone are sufficient.
Second, there are problems with the idea of speciesism (that we should regard all sentient species to be of equal worth or value). If we accept such an idea, we accept that each individual is of equal value (as a sentient animal in its own right). Consequently, the life of a chicken is to be afforded the same status as a life of a human. But do you really consider the life of a battery hen to be the equivalent of the human? If so, you must consider events such as the holocaust in Europe or the genocide in Rwanda, Cambodia, etc, to be of the same moral magnitude as the treatment of an equal number of caged chickens. Really?
Another problem with your proposal is the idea of speciesism as the same as institutional sexism and racism. The latter two were (largely) overcome by the very groups discriminated against, who were able to achieve their equality using reason. They are equal because there are no relevant distinctions between the races or sexes (i.e. they are human too). Neither of those groups relied upon the arguments of well meaning sympathisers with the placards and the slogan 'chickens are sentient animals too' to deliver them from their fate - but you overlook the fact that the chickens do. And if chickens were to employ reason and overcome anthropogenic speciesism, do you think it would convince the fox?
Finally, I eat chicken because it tastes good. And although it may be cruel to do so, so is nature. And to do what nature intended is not at all arrogant.
TerraMer wrote:Dingos are wonderful! Wish people would stop killing them. They're actually beneficial for maintaining a healthy balanced ecosystem when humans aren't interfering/interacting.
Feral dogs, get them out of the national parks. Forget about herbivore ferals, get the dogs out and some native species might get off the threatened species list.
I have spotted dingos in Namadgi NP and Kosciuszko NP, I have also spotted and been followed by feral dogs in the same parks.
cdg wrote:The question is - is there an acceptable native loss level?
cdg wrote:I have seen feral cats and dogs in the wild (sometimes curious dogs will stalk you for awhile) that I could have neatly removed if I'd been lugging a rifle (and if it were legal to carry a rifle in national parks).
maddog wrote:cdg wrote:The question is - is there an acceptable native loss level?
Is that a question, or an appeal to emotion? Please explain.cdg wrote:I have seen feral cats and dogs in the wild (sometimes curious dogs will stalk you for awhile) that I could have neatly removed if I'd been lugging a rifle (and if it were legal to carry a rifle in national parks).
But what if those animals are filling an otherwise vacant niche? You shoot them out, and create a plague of prey animals. What have you achieved?
Cheers
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