privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 am
I actually think this view is pretty uncharitable.
Do you fundamentally oppose the principle of Occam's razor?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occam%27s_razor
I wonder: why are you an atheist?
A classic example in philosophy is:
God created the Universe + God just exists
Vs.
The Universe just exists.
While that doesn't mean absolutely that the former is wrong, there's a very good reason that rational people prefer the latter.
Models that use large numbers of assumptions are empirically more likely to be wrong, and otherwise more subject to abuse: e.g. you can justify believing in anything and make it internally consistent if you prop it up with a convoluted enough set of assumptions.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amI understand that, according to your wiki, you have defined "trait" in such a way so that it basically can be anything. But, I don't think that viewing something from the standpoint of a trait is always the best approach.
That's one definition the wiki covered. The one that makes NTT work is bound by the universe in which it's operating.
That's completely aside from the point of my criticism with respect to the ad hoc complexity of the moral justifications you're using.
I already explained how "traits" are not clearly quantifiable, one or many. You can call it anything you want. The question is what's your justification for devaluing non-humans to the point it's morally permissible to do all of the things we do to them we would otherwise consider quite terrible?
I'm looking for your justification. Call it trait, call it a set of traits, call it a can of worms, I don't care.
The only attempts at justification you provided so far seem intellectually dubious -- for example, "potential moral agency".
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amI'm sure that I don't have the background in philosophy that you do - I have a math background and am primarily interested in the logic behind some of the arguments.
A mathematics background isn't going to get you far -- it may even hold you back by giving you a false sense of competence (Dunning Kruger effect). The field of mathematics is rife with conservatism and often a deep ignorance of empirical science and skepticism. Traditionally religious belief among mathematicians has been much higher than that in other fields in STEM; while surveys are older, it's easier to understand why and it probably still holds true.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amBut, I've read enough to notice that when past philosophers have tried to distill something down into some sort of "essence", there ideas can usually be challenged because they tried to reduce something that is very complicated into something very simple.
I'm not sure what "ideas" you're talking about or how you think they're "challenged".
However, you don't seem to understand the notion of emergent complexity. Occam's razor doesn't forbid emergent complexity-- that's complexity that derives from simpler rules. Indeed, ethics can be very complex when we take into account the empirical minefield we find ourselves in. Simple but inaccurate assumptions about empirical reality can result in devastating unintended consequences.
Do not confuse a conceptually simple foundation for simple answers.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amMy own morality relies on certain observations: for example, I feel that our society has taken on the obligation of protecting all humans (including marginal cases) from rapists and murders. However, we have not taken on this obligation for animals.
The same "observations" would have noted in the past that white society protects whites but doesn't take that obligation for "inferior races".
Likewise to protection of the property rights of men, and women as chattel.
This is where your ignorance of science is a serious problem: these are not objective observations, these are your distilled biases, and your codification of those biases into a sham of a moral system.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amSince we do not treat both the same, our obligations to animals may be a completely separate issue from how we treat humans.
You're jumping from is to ought here in the most terrible way. "This is how we do things so that's how it should be".
The same thinking has been the root of evils in society from the beginning of history, digging its claws into social progress and screaming against change.
That's both the most naive and harmful approach you could take. If you want to discuss ethics, don't simply attempt to
describe the current state of what passes for ethics for most people and then try to mass that description off as prescriptive.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 am
I could list other examples, like neutering/spaying animals, and not the marginal cases. Or, accepting crop related deaths of animals when we probably would not do the same for the marginal cases.
What we happen to DO is not relevant to what we should do.
The fact that humans seem to behave inconsistently should NOT be an invitation to rationalize and defend that inconsistency.
Instead, maybe you can open your mind to the possibility that we are wrong about some things we do?
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amThe problem is, how do you "fit" my reasoning into the NTT argument?
Like I said, I don't really use NTT. I'd rather talk about how convoluted your justifications are and whether that's the way a rational person answers these questions.
But when it comes to NTT, that would demonstrate you to be inconsistent.
Your options would be to:
A. Be intellectually dishonest and develop a convoluted ad hoc "system" to defend your otherwise inconsistent conservative beliefs -- no different from classical geocentrists creating convoluted models of the heavens to save their belief that the Earth is at the center. This is what I'm challenging you on.
or
B. Open your mind to the possibility that you're wrong about something.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amDo I simply not agree that humans have moral value to begin with, and therefore it was never lost in the process?
That's one way you could change your mind.
The NTT article covers this as a risk of using the NTT argument:
Worst case, most people exposed to the argument reject human rights for sake of eating meat, and the world becomes a worse place because of it. Best case, most people exposed to the argument accept veganism for sake of being consistent with human rights, and the world becomes a better place because of it.
The balance of these two inform whether the argument is good for the world or not. This is an empirical matter that's hard to assess, but it's important to keep in mind just as health arguments for veganism may lead people to reject beef (the worst offender) and eat more chicken as a "middle ground" despite the consumption of chicken leading to more animals being killed.
Thus: knowing your audience is important. If it's somebody who is very involved and dedicated to human rights, NTT may be a very safe bet. If it's somebody who you know leans a little on the psychopath side of the spectrum, it may be best to avoid it unless you have a public stage to convert audience members to veganism when they witness the deranged conclusions your opponent will support to avoid veganism.
wiki/index.php/NameTheTrait_2.0%2B_(official)#Niche
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amIs my trait, "sometimes it's good that we look out for our own interests, and there's no proof that animal harm isn't one of those situations"?
Here is where it would be beneficial to understand something about burden of proof. You're placing the burden of proof on those arguing we should abstain from certain apparently unnecessary harms to nonhuman animals; that is those who argue that there's no compelling reason to exclude non-humans from moral consideration merely because they aren't human.
Are you an ethnonationalist or white supremacist?
If so, then you are arguably being consistent here.
See:
"sometimes it's good that we look out for our own [white] interests, and there's no proof [that harming other races] isn't one of those situations"
Are you fine with that reasoning? Will you defend that stance which employs the same logic you're employing to justify harm to animals for lack of "proof" that it's not good?
Or are you ready to furnish undeniable "proof" of the same order that you demand that it's bad to commit genocide against other races?
There is the bitter bullet of consistency you must be willing to bite if you're going down this road.
The overwhelming majority of vegans can and do kill animals when there's good evidence that it's necessary for protecting themselves or other human beings. Virtually nobody is considering non-humans equal here. The difference is that vegans accept that most non-humans have at least *some* value and don't feel it's appropriate to devalue others without evidence -- vegans put the burden of proof on anybody advocating for those acts of harm, rather than those advocating against the harm.
And especially when we're talking about harming animals for our taste pleasure. And especially when there's already overwhelming scientific evidence that the industry that does this is causing additional unnecessary environmental harm that adversely affects human beings too.
If you still think there's not enough proof that meat isn't good, then the level of "proof" you must be demanding is so extraordinary that it's impossible to meet for non-human animals, for women, for other races, for the disabled, for anybody really.
So, if you want to argue burden of proof, you need to decide where the goal post is, and you need to be consistent about respecting other people who decide to genocide another race due to the same lack of "proof" that reaches whatever inordinate height that goal post is set at.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 am
This isn't an attempt to create an "overly complex ad hoc system".
It seems like an attempt to employ a double standard in order to to shift the burden of proof for your special case so that it makes you right by default and then reserve the right to shift the goalposts at any point because you haven't clearly defined them.
Seems like you have made or put on reserve at least three fallacies there.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amThis is an honest investigation of a complex topic. I'll concede that my philosophical prowess is not even in the same ballpark as your own. But, if you're claiming that a person is wrong because their reasoning is too complicated, I'm just not sure what else needs to be said.
The topic of the basis of morality is nowhere near as complex as the actual implementation.
This new justification isn't as superficially complicated as the former that seemed to include potential moral agency, although I think it's pretty safe to assume that "moral agency" stuff lies underneath to explain the "why" of it being good to protect humans, with some Ayn Rand styled rationalizations there.
But let's assume that it's not that complicated: it's still wrong. It's an inconsistent standard as I have explained.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amAnd, why stop at intellectual honesty. Let's be completely honest. It is always going to be easier to find flaws with an idea if you force a person to simplify their rationale.
Doesn't necessarily matter much until the point it becomes too complex to be human-readable. Regardless of complexity, it's easier to identify flaws when you get a person to explain it clearly enough to point out those flaws; otherwise they can be hidden in ambiguity.
Since people are bad at consistency and actually evaluating their own beliefs, the more complicated explanations are actually more likely to display internal inconsistencies, as I think you have demonstrated.
A simpler explanation, like "humans have value non-humans don't period", if a person sticks to his or her guns, is much harder to argue.
So no, you're wrong about that too in practice.
privkeav wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 8:45 amSo, is NTT useful in investigating a person's thought processes, or is it simply an easy way to tell somebody that they're wrong?
Like I said, I don't tend to use or advocate NTT. However, if used correctly it doesn't merely tell people they are wrong, it demonstrates a contradiction. It's only useful for those who have some basic respect for logic and wish to be consistent in their beliefs.