Re: Owning cats is not vegan
Posted: Tue Apr 23, 2019 9:33 am
OK, fine, the prosthetic vision isn't the right analogy here.
1) This is not a serious field of study.
2) The article you are citing was written by an ignorant journalist, probably with a political agenda (We need the government to protect the fish!).
3) It's a combination of those things (which seems most likely).
And the same goes, perhaps even more so, for the stories of science proving that cats love their owners.
And, please, when arguing for veganism, don't insist that fish feel pain, you will not convince educated people with that. The arguments we should use are the ones based on facts, preferably the well-known (taught at school) and uncontroversial facts.
I must admit I don't understand the argument you are making. If the behavior of fish can be fully simulated by a robot, that would strongly suggest fish aren't conscious (and therefore capable of actually feeling pain), rather than that they are, right? Attempting to fit consciousness into something that can be simulated by a robot is, well, not the simplest explanation, right?brimstoneSalad wrote:which is actually much simpler for pain (easily emulated by Synthetic intelligence)
Again, I don't understand what you are saying. Are you saying pain is needed for learning? Well, people with congenital insensitivity to pain are just as capable of both conscious and subconscious learning as we are, right? Sure, it takes longer for them to learn not to bite their tongues, but that's not to say pain is somehow needed for learning.brimstoneSalad wrote:Any animal with a working brain (as we regard it) is constantly processing positive (pleasure) and negative stimuli, and learning how to optimize the former and avoid the latter.
Then you are just trying to manufacture the truth by discarding the evidence. Rose's opposition responds to that argument by saying that perhaps pain can still be evolutionary advantageous even if fish can't know which part of their bodies hurt. That may or may not be true, but it's not as ridiculous as you denying the well-known facts without giving any reason for thinking they are not true.brimstoneSalad wrote:No, and I don't think that's true anyway (though they may have larger regions with fewer nerves).
And yet his paper has passed the peer review, which leaves us with three options:brimstoneSalad wrote:Rose is wrong, but he'll never admit it.
1) This is not a serious field of study.
2) The article you are citing was written by an ignorant journalist, probably with a political agenda (We need the government to protect the fish!).
3) It's a combination of those things (which seems most likely).
And the same goes, perhaps even more so, for the stories of science proving that cats love their owners.
And, please, when arguing for veganism, don't insist that fish feel pain, you will not convince educated people with that. The arguments we should use are the ones based on facts, preferably the well-known (taught at school) and uncontroversial facts.