Post Number:#16
March 9th, 2012, 5:53 am
Belinda,
I'm more than happy to drop this zombie discussion with respect to human rights.
I can't say I'm all that geeked about entering an animal rights debate either, but I do have some thoughts on the matter. I am not pretending to be read-up on animal rights debates. And some of this stuff is just some ignorant formulations, which is not to say that it's wrong. But I won't pretend to be an authority of any kind here.
I think animals don't have human rights or animal rights. They have no rights. I don't think intelligence is a necessary or sufficient condition for attaining human rights. Hence, babies have human rights but are downright stupid. I think only moral agents (that is, human beings) and their offspring have human rights. Now, I don't think any human being has human rights in virtue of being human but, rather, because he belongs to a group whose members recognize each other as having human rights. And every human belongs to this group and you can't un-belong to this group. There are exceptions, but I'd rather not worry about them now.
I think people who argue for the rights of animals -- even philosophers like Peter Singer -- and use arguments relying on the intrinsic properties of those animals (e.g. dolphins are really smart, or great apes are capable of sophisticated feelings), usually to compare them to that of babies or the severely retarded, are putting on a ruse. Human rights are not acquired in virtue of having this or that intrinsic property, so nothing rests on those animals having them.
We moral agents readily bestow upon babies and the severely retarded human rights, so they have human rights. If you kick an baby, even an orphan, you have acted morally. If you kick an orphan rabbit, you have not acted morally, and the reason is because we members don't as a whole don't bestow upon rabbits human rights (or any rights).
Animal rights activists have (what seems like to me at least) absolutely terrible philosophical arguments. What they do effectively though is put up enough of an argument to make their idea more palatable and, they hope, one day much more fashionable among the majority of us. Peter Singer isn't a philosopher, he's in advertising.
He doesn't have to have a good argument for why animals have rights. He only needs to sell the idea to the masses until one day we grant them rights.
I'm more than happy to drop this zombie discussion with respect to human rights.
I can't say I'm all that geeked about entering an animal rights debate either, but I do have some thoughts on the matter. I am not pretending to be read-up on animal rights debates. And some of this stuff is just some ignorant formulations, which is not to say that it's wrong. But I won't pretend to be an authority of any kind here.
I think animals don't have human rights or animal rights. They have no rights. I don't think intelligence is a necessary or sufficient condition for attaining human rights. Hence, babies have human rights but are downright stupid. I think only moral agents (that is, human beings) and their offspring have human rights. Now, I don't think any human being has human rights in virtue of being human but, rather, because he belongs to a group whose members recognize each other as having human rights. And every human belongs to this group and you can't un-belong to this group. There are exceptions, but I'd rather not worry about them now.
I think people who argue for the rights of animals -- even philosophers like Peter Singer -- and use arguments relying on the intrinsic properties of those animals (e.g. dolphins are really smart, or great apes are capable of sophisticated feelings), usually to compare them to that of babies or the severely retarded, are putting on a ruse. Human rights are not acquired in virtue of having this or that intrinsic property, so nothing rests on those animals having them.
We moral agents readily bestow upon babies and the severely retarded human rights, so they have human rights. If you kick an baby, even an orphan, you have acted morally. If you kick an orphan rabbit, you have not acted morally, and the reason is because we members don't as a whole don't bestow upon rabbits human rights (or any rights).
Animal rights activists have (what seems like to me at least) absolutely terrible philosophical arguments. What they do effectively though is put up enough of an argument to make their idea more palatable and, they hope, one day much more fashionable among the majority of us. Peter Singer isn't a philosopher, he's in advertising.
He doesn't have to have a good argument for why animals have rights. He only needs to sell the idea to the masses until one day we grant them rights.