If animals have self-ownership, and the rest of your premises true and validate moral "rights" and moral "obligations" not to infringe on rights, then massive amounts of human "private property" claims have indeed been force, and still are to this day. If a cow has self-ownership, it is immoral for me to kill a cow, much less raise it in miserable suffering until the day I kill it.
Animals having self-ownership calls into HUGE question our ability to claim as private property vast expanses of real property, modify that property to our liking, an take "ownership" of animals.
So essentially, it would significantly hamper your so-called "deductive logic" that established what our property rights are. This has HUGE implications on your view of morality and our productivity as a nation.
Deductive logic requires certain things! You can't just not provide them and then imply that I'm being ridiculous in my questions/assertions.
Kshartle wrote:
Xan wrote:
Dementia doesn't invalidate our ability to pre-judge our actions? I'm not following, Kshartle. Disagree if you like, but I really don't see how that makes it seem that Moda is deliberately misunderstanding anything.
Your premises just aren't as solid as you'd like to think they are. Now, it may be that those premises are solid enough to be the rules of a society, and they may even be the best way to organize society, but they are in no way so self-evident as to command everyone's assent in all circumstances.
He's trying to argue that because we don't have 100% control of the physical world (rocks falling on us) or our mental state at all times (dementia) then humans don't have control over what they do. Can you see the difference between the two? PS has already explained this and others have as well. Contol over your actions and responsibility for them don't require complete mastery of the universe or whatever. PS explained it much better than I did.
It's nitpicking my statement that humans are in control of their bodies, and born of deliberate missunderstanding.
When I say humans are in control of themselves does anyone on Earth think that means I'm saying they can lift a giant boulder or are immune to mental disease? No one in their right mind would draw that conclusion from my statements. That's why I'm saying its
deliberate missunderstanding to change the subject or require endless clarification and specifity that is completely uneccesary. It's an argumentative tactic.
Not being in complete control of everything we do is relevant kshartle. I'm not just nitpicking. We NEED to take from nature to survive other aspects of it. We NEED to find shelter. The fact that we can control our behavior lends inductive weight towards morality, but realizing control is a relative term is critical. Am I "responsible" if I notice a tree about to fall on a kid and say nothing? I controlled that I said nothing and could have warned him. But I didn't. Do I have ANY duty to that kid to warn him?
These are extremely important moral questions. If moral truth is ONLY tied up in owning yourself and property, and not infringing on others rights of self ownership and (your idea of) private property, then there is NO moral weight to not saying anything to the kid, unless you define your potential ability to warn him (control) as implying a responsibility (duty) to help him, even though you can't fly to him in time, you can't catch the tree from falling, but you can see that it's gonna fall, and can prevent a horrible outcome. The kid has the ability (control... Let's assume he's 14) to identify and stay out from under weak trees. Is he more "responsible" for his death if it occurs? Do you bear ANY "responsibility" at all for saying nothing?
This is why it's so important to understand our limits to control. It shapes how we have formed both our moral codes (warning friends of danger if it's there) and immoral behaviors in spite of them (stealing food to survive).
Also, there is the question of whether our (potential) ability to identify moral truths make us in-fact intrinsically valuable beings, to which bringing harm is in-fact immoral. You seem to try to use "ownership" (in the meaning "the morally valid control of") as an overriding arch to judge interactions, but ownership (limited though it may be, control in-fact) is different than ownership (morally valid control of and "right" to benefits of). These are DIFFERENT. One does not automatically, deductively bring the other.
Sorry if I wasn't clear about why I think this is so important.
But please understand that if you are wanting to assert a deductive argument, it makes it much easier if you define terms, and actually state it in the proper format, which you seem unwilling or unable to do. It might help clear up a ton of miscommunication. Why don't you do it for every observer here? You might strike rhetorical gold!
"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine