That was my point. Your response was "plants don't feel pain". Thus all you did was say "your hypothetical is..... hypothetical.". Why come and post in the thread if your whole intention was just to tell me that you don't like hypotheticals, that my hypothetical is hypothetical, and that my use of the word hypothetical doesn't fit one of the definitions of hypothetical?Humane Hominid wrote:That said, I will offer an olive branch and snip my original reply to include only my direct response to your hypothetical:Thus, I find the hypothetical uninteresting.there is no evidence that plants are sentient and feel pain. Evolutionarily speaking, it would make no sense for them to do so, and at the biochemical level, their cellular communication pathways are far too slow to have the processing power of even the simplest animal.
In response to your other post:
It wasn't snark, it was frustration. I was saying "what did I do to get this kind of response?". Twizlby's reply was most certainly not in a "reasoned tone of good faith", he was comparing my question to "step on a crack break your mom's back" and "eating koala diarrhea for god". Then proceeding to do what you did, telling me that my hypothetical is hypothetical... Plus, as you can see from his other posts, my analysis of his tone was obviously correct, so my response to his post wasn't unjustified. Though 2 wrongs don't make a right, so I shouldn't have replied that way. VA's response just got lumped in because I was annoyed and it had a slight resemblance. Which you'll also note that I apologized one or 2 posts down from that.
I just don't understand the assumption that I'm going for a "gotcha", seeing as the only one I could even possibly get would be:
"HA! That means if we ever discover that plants are sentient, then your dietary habits don't have any moral basis! I mean, you could still do it if you want, or for health reasons, and it's based on a hypothetical situation that doesn't have any evidence. BUT GOTCHA..... right?"
I have a friend who is vegetarian just because she doesn't like meat, she doesn't care if other people eat it. And another friend who doesn't drink soda, simply because he doesn't like the taste/feel of carbonation in his drinks. The fact that neither of them use a moral/medical/health reason doesn't make their choice any less valid or anything.
However, if you want to continue arguing, then I'll have to owe you, because I don't want this thread to get locked over this (assuming it doesn't get locked after this reply).
I just thought of 2 other questions I could start threads about but after this, I'm not sure if I'm curious enough lol.