WILGA wrote:If you would have bothered to read that thread, you would have noticed that your answer is insufficient.
The opening thread has aliens landing on presumbly present day earth and unable to understand our "barking". You ask how they could possbly know we are sentient and say dogs are not. I answered that. Now further back in time humans would still show a high ability to transfer information between themselves, form organized command structures, extropolate knowledge and predict off of it etc. The fact that we build and train others to build structures as opposed to knowing them from instinct and can adapt and change depending on circumstance. Our desgins evolve with time because we think.
There are fossils of the homo sapiens dating back far over 100'000 years. The humans from then were not able to smelt steel, build flying machines or crack atoms. They haven't understood their surrounding and have believed that if it rains, god is crying or similiar nonesnse. The oldest known form of art dates back only 75.000 years. It is to assume that the humans before haven't had a use for art. And even then, art has had not the purpose from today but was a cultic occurrence, done either to appease alleged gods or to have something to worship substitutional for their alleged gods. Would they have been entitled to their own rights?
The fact that they believed rain is thier god crying indicates they are trying to explain thier enviroment and are forming logical answers based upon what they know. A fox doesn't think why it rains but a human does.
Would e.g. a homo neanderthalensis, if the alien would have arrived on earth at a time, when this species still exists, be entitled to its own rights?
That is an irrevelent question. That depends entrily on who or what these aliens believe. If they are cruel strip miners bent on harvesting the planet's resources any race that couldn't pose a threat would be wiped out. The better question is would they reconize neanderthals as a sentient species or simpely a slightly less hairy ape running around. Since the "apes" would be struggling to master fire, form cohesive units, comunicate with each other etc the aliens would deduce they are sentient. That they are better then the other animals roaming the world.
But that was not always so. See above.
It was a joke but humans became the domiant species because we could think. We were weaker, slower and almost defenless, in a fight between fangs and claws versus teeth and nails humans don't stand much of a fight, yet using our intellect we out thought our prey and compensated for our weaknesses. So yes we have always had the "gun" ie an edge over the competition.
Here you are mixing up several terms: sentient, self-awareness and intelligence. That's why I have asked Punkmaster to define these terms. They are often used although their meaning is not known. But in such a debate, one has to know the exact meaning of such words if they are used.
Intelligence:The ability to reason.
Self aware-You realize you exist. You realize there is a "you" and by extension there is a "not you" in everyone else.
sentient:The first two combined.
My thoughts on the defination at any rate.
That's the wrong approach to the problem. You have to be sure that an individual you will kill is not, as you would say, sentient, intelligent, self-aware. It's your task to prove it because you will be responsible for killing a sentient, intelligent, self-aware being.
I am sure because they have shown zero signs, with the exception of say chimps, of being anywhere near that area. So my task is proven, they fail by any fair criteria.
To say that your victim couldn't convince you that it is sentient, intelligent, self-aware or, even if it is not, protected by it own rights, would be a terrible defence.
That means that you have to be sure, which characteristics are relevant for the question, who has such rights. You have to be sure, that you have not arbitrary chosen criteria because you know that you would fulfil them because you have them. You have to choose criteria that would be universal accepted.
We are. If animals were sentient they would have attempted comunications via math if by nothing else which should be as universial as you can get. 1 will always equal 1 and all that. So once again you have no proof they are sentient but we should assume they until we can prove beyond a shadow of a doubt which can't be done. Since there is no comunicaiton between our two "species" since after all a cow isn't sentient we can never disprove that they are sentinet but simply refuse to talk to us and like being turned into hamburger.
You ask an impossible goal. Now we have pointed what makes human unique, we have pointed out that as far as anyone knows a cow isn't self-aware, it has no true concept of itself. We all have done everything possible to answer your questions and all you have done is say how do we know or define this term. If you have proof that an specific animal is self aware please show me it.
These humans are anatomical as far as possible identical with the humans from today. But you can't communicate with them and you will not see any signs of a modern civilisation. Compared to other mammals that are living in families, packs, prides, droves, flocks, folds or herds, there is no relevant difference in their behaviour. And while insects are constructing gigantic buildings, birds are constructing their nests and beavers dams, the homo sapiens from then lives still in caves.
The differnce between the two groups is the "cavemen" can and will exchange information they were not hardwired to share. They will bury thier dead indicating that thier is a probability they have some belief in an afterlife which indicates being self-aware otherwise you wouldn't fear death only dieing. They will also be toying with fire, the first step in mastery of thier enviroment, and this knowledge can be spread from biped to biped via a form of comunication not genetic instinct. Geese do none of these things. So no, aliens figure out primitive man is the sentient lifeform and not a pack of otters making a nest.
The logical answer has to be that it is not correct to extinguish a whole species for one individual that will die anyway - if not now, then in 100 years.
That would be the correct answer even if it would be my own child and I would act differently.
Forgive me but I find that cold blooded. A human life is sacred, I would kill an entire species of animals for one human child so that he would live for those hundred years but I do thank you for being honest.
It would have been better if you would have not only read some of what I have written but all I have written.
I read the opening post and responded too it and a few of the questions I found most interesting. I do not believe reading every single post of yours, I did skim it however, is required.
Not each animal or plant is raised for food but also for other purposes.
You asked what right a man has that a plant doesn't. The first would be the right not to be eaten. As I said it was a starting point and you go on from there not that that is the only right man enjoys. Slavery would be another right but really these are self-evident. There is no point to ask what are the rights of man as opposed to plant because we already know the rights.
And especially the Ha-Shoah would be also an answer for your question from above, why cows haven't led a massive revolt across the countryside. The Jews were gone in the gas chambers without the application of vis absoluta. There were even Jews who have helped with the killing. According to your logic, that would show, that the Jews from then didn't have self-awareness because they haven't led a massive revolt across the countryside.
The whole bit with you know Jews activly helping to murder other people, to preserve thier own skin no doubt, implies reasoning ability and intelligence. Also There was resiestence against the Germans during this both in direct conflict and in more pointless defiance. The people of Jewish faith had to be kept under active guard to keep them from escaping, cows merely need a fence to keep them from wandering away when if they truly wished to escape could do so quiet easily.
I don't say, that I disagree with the statement, that humans are self-aware.
The question remains, what self-awareness is at all, why you assume that animals are not self-aware and why you assume that this ability is relevant at all.
You asked what makes human unique repeatedly, being self-aware is generaly accepted to being the first step yet you keep asking the same question over and over as if we never responded. We assume animals are not self-aware because they have never shown to be. It is important because if one is not self-aware one is a drone, a hollow shell whose life is by defination not unique or valuble.
That answer does not define what intelligence is.
Until now, nobody has claimed, that education is a relevant criteria for the question who is entitled to its own rights. But if it is a relevant criteria, does this mean that humans who don't get education have no own rights?
You brought up if man was intillgent or merely educated. I pointed out the bloody obvious that you can not educate lower animals on the same scale of a human. If we dropped a colony of humans on a feral world without any education at all given enough time thier descendents would be building flyimg machines and cracking atoms. A dog, given an army of the best scholars in the universe could never learn to read or write. That is the differnce. We are intelligent we learn things, we probe and try and understand everything there is around us. A dog cares not. He may care for you his owner but he doesn't question why he is the pet and you are the owner or where you go when you leave or anything else.
Furthermore it is more than doubtful that a normal human that would unprepared land on an island could survive. That's why there are today so called survival trainings - most people don't know, how to survive in the wild. But even if it could survive, you wouldn't find any traces of civilisation any more. It would be difficult, if possible at all, to find differences to the behaviour of animals.
I did not say it would be difficult but not impossible. The human descendents would try and understand why things are the way they are be it inventing pagan gods or predicting weather cycles they would strive to understand thier universe and make them it's master. No other animal does. I might consider a Jungle Man to be a crude, savage barely above the animals in his kingdom but could be reasoned with to a limited degree. I could threaten him and he would grasp the concept or I could teach him to read and write which save for chimps is a feat impossible for any animal.
Does this mean, that the criteria for rights is to be human?
So much so that a human has rights regardless of any other criteria because he is human. Sentient Aliens should be regarded similar rights however.
Or does this mean, that Jimmy does not have rights until he has developed what you are calling sentience?
I was just pointing out that under the strictist of definations we don't treat Jimmy as sentient the way we would treat an adult. I was less trying to make a defination answer in a gray area then simply revealing just what a swamp we were walking into.
Or does this mean, that Jimmy has rights because he has the potential to develop what you are calling sentience? But means this also that, if Jimmy is terminally ill and there is not doubt that he will die in a few weeks and that he will never develop what you are calling sentience that he would have no rights because there is no potential to develop what you are calling sentience? And does this mean that a human who is born with a mental disability and who will never develop what you are calling sentience, has also no rights because there is no potential to develop what you are calling sentience?
We were talking normal baselines showing the differnce between a normal chimp and a normal human child. Once we accept there is a differnce we are thus forced to admit humans and chimps are seperated by a divide. We treat humans for what they are, human as we would wish to be treated. We treat them as above the animal kingdom regardless of life expectency or mental ability because they belong to our race and deserve special treatment. The ape is an ape, he is not part of us and is not seintient and thus deserves no special consideration beyond what we might give to a dog or a goldfish.
You can call this a double standard, illogical or plain cruel but Jimmy is Jimmy and an Ape is an Ape. I would apply this standard to any sentient lifeform I come across, a simple matter of proving we are better then the animals if nothing else.
Humans are not able to eat all species because many are poisoned. Have fun trying to eat a Amanita phalloides.
And bacteria, mold or insects can "eat" more species than humans can. You will find them all-around.
You ask a general question you get a general answer. Yes humans can not eat every single lifeform on this planet but by and the large if we wished to and it lives on this world we can eat it. You may have also noticed hte other part where we are not normally on another animals diet. Beyond microbes I'm not sure anything activly tries and eats a human before death sets in and the various rotting agents swarm in. My question would be what animal would you like to trade places with on the food chain. I doubt there will be many that are not in an epic struggle just to be not eaten by something else.
See, that comes from not reading a thread in which you want to participate. I have never said that there is no difference between a human and a shrimp. Quite the contrary: There are differences between all species. That's what makes a species unique. The question I have asked it why the uniqueness of a human is considered special compared to the uniqueness of other species.
* Bangs head* I read enough of your posting, it isn't like they change from post to post in this thread. Now I am aware that you have never directly stated a human and shrimp is equal but that is a logical progression from your line of reasoning. You are arguing that animals and plants deserve rights. You dismiss that humans are natural superior to other forms of life because we are sentient. Therefore what is your criteria, how do you justify a human is more valube then a shrimp? As I said before either you use abandoned criteria and say all life is sacred or you use critera which means 99.9% of life on this planet is classified as animals and have no rights.