unnatural vegan wrote:
Great point, although I didn't get the reference. I have no idea who "Dillahunty" is.
Matt Dillahunty is a prominent figure in the Atheist/Skeptic community. Slightly less popular/well known than PZ Myers, who is slightly less popular than Richard Dawkins. He was the predominant host of "The Atheist Experience" a call-in show based out of Austin.
Here's an open letter we wrote to him on the forum. The formatting is a little broken. TheVeganAtheist has a youtube channel, and he did a reading of the letter there (which is in three parts embedded on that page, after the intro, and before the full text).
https://theveganatheist.com/an-open-let ... illahunty/
I recommend you check out some of "The Atheist Experience" on youtube.
https://www.youtube.com/user/TheAtheistExperience
The most important thing to know about Matt is that he claims to be an advocate of rational secular morality. He has done a number of talks on it (some of which seem to be linked there on that youtube channel), and he's probably second only to Sam Harris in regard to his public advocacy on the topic.
unnatural vegan wrote:Francione's reasoning is so childlike. It appears he is starting from "veganism is right" and "animal welfare is wrong" and creating a philosophy from those preceding beliefs. Then vegans promote it because it's easier, i.e. using an animal is wrong. Period. End of discussion.
Close, it's a little more nuanced than that; Francione actually rejects consequentialism, and follows Deontology (roughly in the Kantian tradition -- are you familiar?).
So, more likely he started from the premise of crazy (based on his bizarre metaphysical beliefs), and then 'reasoned' that animal welfare was wrong from there, if what he does can be called reasoning.
unnatural vegan wrote:And I really liked what you said here in that thread regarding animal use (or "exploitation" as either Gary would put it):
Thanks!
unnatural vegan wrote:
Plus, many self-proclaimed skeptics are merely conspiracy theorists, e.g. the anti-vaccine and anti-gmo movements.
True, maybe I should have clarified. Skeptics, with a capital "S", as in the skeptic movement (which doesn't embrace 'skepticism' on vaccinations or climate change). That is, scientific skepticism (although by far not all of them are consistently scientific, like the Quack Harriet Hall, who believes all sorts of conspiracy theories and nonsense about nutrition and just accidentally happens to support vaccinations).
http://www.skepdic.com/refuge/getinvolved.html
Mainly those three organizations make up the movement.
http://www.skeptic.com/about_us/manifesto/
Far too much text in a long and I assume detailed explanation of what Skepticism is and isn't (as a rule I try to read everything I link to, but I just skipped around there).
unnatural vegan wrote:
May I ask for your view on using disturbing imagery to shock people? Also, what about approaches like Direct Action Everywhere's #disruptspeciesism video?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LmfRMeU6pQ8
I have a hard time seeing these approaches as anything other than manipulative and obnoxious, but perhaps they have their place.
I take a pretty strict agnostic stance on the subject of
utility, until I see evidence of efficacy, or the inverse. It's not clear to me how these things affect public perception, or if they do more good or more harm.
Most people who do things like this are following a faith based activism plan, where they just assume what they're doing is useful or good for the movement, and they're not usually very amenable to reason on the subject (particularly lacking hard data), so I usually leave it alone.
However, if somebody will actually listen, I will encourage him or her to use forms of outreach which are actually known to be effective.
These guys have the right idea:
http://www.animalcharityevaluators.org/
This, of course, for the same reason that if you have cancer, you get actual medicine which is proven effective, rather than jumping for the bizarre rain forest herb some shaman said would cure you.
Maybe the weird herb will cure your cancer, but probably not. Known effective methods are not
very effective (which is why people get desperate), but they're the best we currently have evidence of. It's extremely important to do analysis on whatever outreach methods are attempted.
I would encourage people to experiment with whatever
legal methods they can
IF they're going to analyze the efficacy of those methods using legitimate means with a mind to research and discovery.