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    5 days ago

    Saying ‘we don’t know for sure, so we can’t make decisions’ is a recipe for total practical and ethical paralysis. Science never deals in 100% absolute certainty; it deals in overwhelming probability based on empirical data.

    ​While rhizomes are fascinating, structurally complex communication systems, they do not meet the definition of information integration. There is a profound functional difference between a network that distributes information and a system that integrates it.

    We have an absolute mountain of neurological, chemical, and behavioral evidence that animals experience conscious pain and suffering. We have zero empirical evidence that plants do.

    ​If we treat the high-probability suffering of a dog and the zero-evidence, purely speculative ‘suffering’ of a carrot as ethically equal because ‘the truth is we don’t know,’ then ethics becomes meaningless. We would be frozen in place, unable to eat a plant or walk on grass out of fear that it might be conscious.

    We prioritise animal welfare over plant welfare because that is where the evidence of suffering actually exists.

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      5 days ago

      if you are a consequentialist, you will never know what to do, because you can’t actually know all possible outcomes, or how your actions might turn out. deontologists don’t struggle with this. and since it’s acceptable that animals are killed no matter what method of food production we use, we must accept that killing animals for food (whether to eat them, prevent them from eating our crops, or just by accident through crop planting and harvesting) is acceptable. and if it’s acceptable that that we kill animals for food, eating them can’t be immoral. and none of this needs to consider consciousness at all.

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        ​You’ve moved the goalposts away from my original point of contention which was the premise that plants are as conscious as animals.

        Nevertheless, your new ethical logic has some flaws:

        1. To a deontologist, intentionally slaughtering an animal is a deliberate wrong. Accidentally running over a field mouse with a harvester is a tragic, unintended side effect of producing food. We don’t say ‘since people die in car accidents anyway, murder is morally acceptable.’ Intent matters, equating a freak farming accident with premeditated slaughter is a logical fallacy.

        2. Even if we ignore intent and look strictly at the body count, livestock eat vast amounts of crops. By eating meat, one is responsible for the intentional death of the livestock plus the exponentially higher number of accidental field animal deaths caused by harvesting the crops to feed them.

        3. Consequentialism doesn’t require you to be a psychic who knows every future ripple effect; it requires you to make choices based on predictable outcomes. I don’t need to know the fate of the universe to know that buying meat directly and predictably finances animal slaughter.

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          2 days ago

          To a deontologist, intentionally slaughtering an animal is a deliberate wrong.

          You’re going to be hard pressed to find a professional philosopher who agrees with this claim.

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            Actually, it’s incredibly easy to find professional philosophers who agree with this as it’s the entire foundation of modern animal rights philosophy. ​While Immanuel Kant famously excluded animals from his moral framework in the 1700s, modern deontological philosophers have spent the last forty years correcting that.

            ​Tom Regan: One of the most famous ethicists of the 20th century. His landmark book, The Case for Animal Rights (1983), is the definitive deontological argument for animals. He argues that animals are ‘subjects-of-a-life’ with inherent value, and intentionally killing them uses them merely as a means to an end, which is a direct rights violation.

            ​Christine Korsgaard: She is currently one of the world’s leading Kantian philosophers, based at Harvard. She wrote an entire book (Fellow Creatures) arguing strictly from a Kantian, deontological framework that animals are ‘ends in themselves’ and that slaughtering them is absolutely a deliberate moral wrong.

            ​Gary Francione: A leading philosopher and legal scholar whose entire ‘abolitionist’ approach to animal rights is built on deontological principles, arguing that animals have a fundamental negative right not to be used as human property.

            ​So, no, I’m not hard-pressed at all. Deontology actively recognises the inherent rights of conscious beings. But even if you ignore modern philosophy and cling to 18th-century Kant, you still can’t escape the Doctrine of Double Effect. Under any version of deontology, there is a structural moral difference between an unintended accident and premeditated killing.

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              there is a structural moral difference between an unintended accident and premeditated killing.

              if you know your actions will result in killing, even if it is incidental instead of the intention, the morality is the same. it’s not an accident.

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                If you truly believe that knowing an action will incidentally result in some deaths makes it morally identical to premeditated killing, you just criminalised the entire modern world.

                ​By your logic, there is no difference between a doctor knowing a certain percentage of patients will have a fatal allergic reaction to a life-saving vaccine, and a doctor intentionally injecting a patient with poison. You are saying those two things are morally the same.

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                  ​By your logic, there is no difference between a doctor knowing a certain percentage of patients will have a fatal allergic reaction to a life-saving vaccine, and a doctor intentionally injecting a patient with poison. You are saying those two things are morally the same.

                  if they have informed consent, then yes it is the same. and if they fail to get informed consent, then yes it is the same.

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                    ​That is not a moral philosophy; that is the total destruction of morality.

                    ​If your logic holds, that knowledge of a potential outcome makes the outcome morally equivalent to intentional harm, then everything is a crime.

                    ​If you drive a car to work, you know with statistical certainty that your presence on the road contributes to the probability of a fatal accident. By your definition, you are ‘intentionally’ killing someone every time you get behind the wheel, regardless of whether you are a safe driver or a reckless one.

                    ​If a parent gives birth to a child, they know with 100% certainty that the child will eventually die. By your logic, having a child is a premeditated act of murder.

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              you found literally 3 people, and their positions are novel, lacking entrenchment. In fact, they’re directly disputed by their peers.

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                Moving the goalposts again, you claimed I would be “hard-pressed to find a professional philosopher who agrees”, I gave you three prominent ones.

                ​Your claim that their positions are “novel and lack entrenchment” is factually incorrect. Tom Regan’s The Case for Animal Rights is literally a foundational textbook taught in nearly every university applied ethics course in the world. Christine Korsgaard is one of the leading scholars at Harvard.

                ​And your point that they are “directly disputed by their peers” can be said for the whole of philosophy? Kant is disputed. Utilitarianism is disputed. If being “disputed by peers” means an ethical framework is invalid, then literally no ethical framework exists.

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                  Moving the goalposts again, you claimed I would be “hard-pressed to find a professional philosopher who agrees”, I gave you three prominent ones.

                  but, within the whole collection of professional philosophers, they are exceptional.

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                    You have just spent this entire conversation trying to discredit the philosophers, the economists, and the logic rather than actually defending your own choices. This debate has reached its end because you aren’t arguing to find the truth; you are arguing to protect your habits.

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                  Tom Regan’s The Case for Animal Rights is literally a foundational textbook taught in nearly every university applied ethics course in the world. Christine Korsgaard is one of the leading scholars at Harvard.

                  and both their works fly in the face of historical deontological thought. it’s a tradition that eclipses their works by 200 years. they sorely lack entrenchment within deontological thought, and, as I said, are directly refuted by their peers.

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                    You are relying on a massive Appeal to Tradition fallacy.

                    ​Immanuel Kant lived 200 years ago. He also lived in an era where mainstream philosophical thought routinely excluded women and non-white races from full moral consideration. Does the fact that human rights and feminism “fly in the face of historical 18th-century thought” mean they lack entrenchment? No. It means humanity evolved, our scientific understanding of biology and consciousness evolved, and our ethical frameworks were updated to fix historical blind spots.

                    ​Deontology is a logical framework, not a 200-year-old religious dogma where we are forced to worship Kant’s 18th-century biological ignorance. Korsgaard and Regan didn’t invent a ‘novel’ system; they took the core deontological rule (do not use a conscious subject merely as a means to an end) and applied it accurately using modern science.

                    ​But more importantly, you are hiding behind a history of philosophy lesson to avoid answering the actual argument.

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          I don’t need to know the fate of the universe to know that buying meat directly and predictably finances animal slaughter.

          it doesn’t directly finance it, and it doesn’t predictably finance it. The people who did the slaughtering were already paid and there’s no guarantee that they’ll be in business tomorrow.

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          Consequentialism doesn’t require you to be a psychic who knows every future ripple effect; it requires you to make choices based on predictable outcomes.

          and since you can’t know the future, you can’t actually predict anything.

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            Saying “you can’t actually predict anything” is a complete abandonment of basic logic and common sense.

            ​If you truly believe we can’t predict outcomes, then why do you look both ways before crossing the street? By your logic, since you can’t know the future, you can’t predict that a speeding car will kill you, so you shouldn’t bother looking. Why do you set an alarm clock? Why do you eat when you’re hungry? You do all of these things because you are perfectly capable of predicting high-probability outcomes.

            ​You are confusing absolute mystical certainty with empirical probability.

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              ​You are confusing absolute mystical certainty with empirical probability.

              what is ethics of not a discipline seeking mystical certainty? consequentialist ethics suffers from an epistemic flaw, and it’s well known, and often the reason it is rejected. my approach isn’t unique. most people who reject consequentialism do so for this reason, or because it can also be summed up “the ends justify the means”.

              since our discussion started from the deontological objection to treating animals as ends, surely, you’re not now telling me you don’t believe in deontology, and were just making bad faith arguments.

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                You’re confusing ‘debating’ with ‘adopting a school of thought’. I’m using multiple ethical frameworks because you’ve failed to maintain a consistent position across any of them.

                ​When I point out the Deontological error (that intentional slaughter is not the same as an accidental farming death), you deflect.

                ​When I point out the Consequentialist reality (that meat production causes more ‘incidental’ crop deaths than plant-based diets), you call it an ‘epistemic flaw.’

                ​You are not arguing for a refined, consistent ethical system; you are arguing for moral nihilism. You are using the ‘epistemic flaw’ argument, the idea that because we can’t know everything, we are responsible for nothing, to absolve yourself of all responsibility.

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                  You are using the ‘epistemic flaw’ argument, the idea that because we can’t know everything, we are responsible for nothing, to absolve yourself of all responsibility.

                  on the contrary. i’m making avowed consequentialists responsible for all possible future events. they need to bite the bullet on that to remain consequentialists. since i’m not a consequentialist, it has no bearing on me.

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                    ​By claiming “I’m not a consequentialist” as a defense for paying to have a sentient being killed, you aren’t winning an intellectual debate; you are admitting that you have no consistent ethical standard. You are essentially saying, “I don’t have a moral framework that governs my choices; I have a list of convenient excuses.”

                    ​If you aren’t a Consequentialist, and your arguments against Deontology have failed, what is your moral framework? It appears to be moral relativism where the rules change whenever you need them to so that your lifestyle remains unassailable.

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                  When I point out the Consequentialist reality (that meat production causes more ‘incidental’ crop deaths than plant-based diets), you call it an ‘epistemic flaw.’

                  consequentialism suffers from the epistemic flaw, whether you recognize it or not.

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                    You are repeating a standard, undergraduate-level critique of consequentialism as if it were a unique insight that invalidates the reality of animal agriculture. It doesn’t.

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                  ​When I point out the Deontological error (that intentional slaughter is not the same as an accidental farming death), you deflect.

                  no, i am still involved in that argument, and haven’t moved my position at all.

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                    If you haven’t moved your position despite the counter-arguments regarding intent, supply chain dynamics, and trophic levels, then we have reached a permanent impasse.

                    ​A debate where one side refuses to engage with the logical implications of their position is no longer a debate; it is simply a monologue. I have provided the necessary distinctions regarding the intentionality of slaughter versus the incidental nature of harvest deaths.

                    Your refusal to address the primary-cause responsibility is not a logical stance, it is a choice to remain static.

                    ​Since you are not willing to update your position based on the logic presented, there is no further value in this conversation.

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          By eating meat, one is responsible for the intentional death of the livestock plus the exponentially higher number of accidental field animal deaths caused by harvesting the crops to feed them.

          I can’t be responsible for something that somebody else did in the past.

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            The ‘it already happened’ defense ignores basic supply and demand. When you buy a piece of meat at the store, you are casting a financial vote to restock that empty space on the shelf. Your money directly funds the breeding and slaughter of the next animal.

            ​If I buy stolen goods, I am funding and incentivising theft, even though someone else already stole them in the past. If I pay a hitman after a job is done, I can’t stand in court and say, “I can’t be responsible for something somebody else did in the past”.

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              If I pay a hitman after a job is done, I can’t stand in court and say, “I can’t be responsible for something somebody else did in the past”.

              this isn’t analogous to how most people get meat. the person who did the killing is paid long before most people walk into a grocery store or restaurant. and so has everyone else along the supply chain.

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                You are describing a static transaction, but the food industry is a continuous cycle. You are pretending the grocery store is a one-time clearance sale, rather than a rolling inventory system.

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                  they may want to stay in business, but sometimes, they don’t. my purchase doesn’t guarantee that they stay in business, nor that they maintain their current business practices. in short, i’m not responsible for what they may do in the future.

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              Your money directly funds the breeding and slaughter of the next animal.

              no, it doesn’t. it funds the grocer, who can decide what to do with it since it’s now their money. it’s not mine.

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                You are confusing a legal transfer of currency with the economic reality of market incentives.

                ​Yes, technically the money belongs to the grocer once you hand it over. But the grocer is not a charity. They are a capitalist business that operates on data. You didn’t just hand them money; you handed them money in exchange for a specific product.

                ​By making that exchange, you sent a clear financial signal that procuring a dead animal was a profitable choice for them, so if they procure another one, their profit will likely increase.

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                  You are confusing a legal transfer of currency with the economic reality of market incentives.

                  i think you are confusing economic theory with ethical theory.

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                    ​You cannot separate the two because economics is the mechanism through which your ethical choices manifest in the real world.

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                    The slaughterhouse is responsible for their actions, but that does not absolve you in any moral or legal framework.

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              When you buy a piece of meat at the store, you are casting a financial vote to restock that empty space on the shelf.

              no, i’m not.

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                Saying “no, I’m not” isn’t an argument; it is just denial. You are arguing against the basic mechanics of retail inventory.

                ​How exactly do you think grocery stores operate? Do you think store managers just randomly guess what to put on the shelves, completely ignoring what customers actually buy?

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                  Saying “no, I’m not” isn’t an argument; it is just denial. You are arguing against the basic mechanics of retail inventory.

                  a claim made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence. i wasn’t arguing at all.

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                    You were provided with the fundamental mechanics of supply chain logistics, and you chose to ignore them. There is a vast difference between “a claim made without evidence” and a claim you simply refuse to accept because it challenges your comfort.

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                  i think that there are an ungodly number of burgers and hotdogs stocked in every grocery store in america right now, and that’s not reflective of how many were bought last week. they are all operating on speculation and guesses, interpreting past trends, but, ultimately, they will decide what to buy, and i don’t make that decision for them.

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                    Yes, supermarkets use speculative forecasting. They guess what you want, but they don’t guess based on magic; they guess based on your past behavior and the behavior of millions of others like you. When you buy meat, you are not just a passive participant; you are the input data for their next forecast. You are the reason their ‘speculation’ becomes a reality.

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              supply and demand is a theory about price discovery. it is not an immutable law that drives production.

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                ​If you ran a bakery and nobody bought your blueberry muffins on Monday, you would bake fewer of them on Tuesday. The meat industry operates on the exact same principle, just on a massive scale. To claim that consumers refusing to buy meat has zero impact on how many animals the industry breeds and slaughters is to deny the foundational premise of how every business on earth operates.

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                  To claim that consumers refusing to buy meat has zero impact on how many animals the industry breeds and slaughters is to deny the foundational premise of how every business on earth operates.

                  the people running the industry can make any rationalization they want for their actions: they still hold responsibility for them.

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                    Again, you’ve moved the goalposts from ‘I have no influence’ to ‘It’s their fault, not mine.’

                    ​You are now arguing that because the industry has the agency to choose to kill, you are absolved of the responsibility for paying them to do it, but that is not how moral agency works.

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                  ​If you ran a bakery and nobody bought your blueberry muffins on Monday, you would bake fewer of them on Tuesday.

                  i might. but if i knew national blueberry day was tuesday, i might bake more. or i might increase advertising. or i might lobby to mandate blueberry muffins in school, prison, and military foods. or i could choose a thousand other courses of action. and someone’s choice to buy my muffins, or not, cannot be said to decide for me. i get to make my own decisions.

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                    You are now arguing that because a business owner has agency, that consumer demand magically ceases to be the primary engine of production.

                    ​This is a category error. You are confusing the mechanism by which a business fights for survival with the source of its funding.

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            I never claimed that you did, but you joined in on a comment chain in which that was the central argument.

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                Which claim exactly are you attacking then?

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                    I already addressed that… Even if we accept that consciousness is “not conclusively proven”, science doesn’t work by requiring 100% certainty before we apply ethical standards; it works by weight of evidence.