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Animal Rights
(58 posts, started )

Poll : Is it right to cause physical harm to the accused?

No
68
Yes
22
Yes, but i'd like to keep my privacy on this
11
I guess as long as everyone lives by the "do unto others as you want done unto yourself", there wouldn't be a problem to anyone. This would include animals!
Quote from CSU1 :God hasn't got a clue whats goin on these days, thats just some old media stunt to make money, The Bible

l0l m8 catch up y0 g0d izzz liek total down wiv' all dis shiv y'all he'z like total whatever lol

10 virtual monies to whoever tells me whatever I just typed, I'm clueless.
Quote :The poll question asks 'is it ok to condone bringing harm upon others?', the fact that the animal is the victim is not relevant in this case, the poll just shows the amount of killers among us.

Probably more than you realise. We all kill - we have to to live this is part of being alive: Death beggets life. Whether it be plant or animal, we kill. The question is whether we murder, and in asking that, we must define what murder is.

Quote :I think the point where animal becomes human is when the animal is mentally able to retain the intellect and capacity to conjure up the worst sin of all - pre-meditated murder. I would have no problem doing a day's work in a slaughter house killing cattle etc but seeing another human harmed in any way(especially for throwing a ruddy cat aginst a wall)is beyond me. Jail sentences or slavery are the only option for punishment.

Well firstly I disagree on the worst crime, according to the law the worst crime is treason, according to me the worst crime is rape (and sadly it's extremely common ). Most importantly though, I think we're at that point of defining what murder is again.

Now as a concept most people seem to think of murders as people who kill for sport. In reality this is very rare, it is the domain of serial killers. Murder however, usually happens out of revenge. To me murdering for revenge is a tough thing to stomach, I am morally impartial to the act of the kill, I just dont think revenge is ever a good motive.

However, i'd have no problem with murdering a rapist if I believed there was sufficient cause to believe they would rape again. Thus, in my own moral code I have no problem with pre-emptively murdering a guilty man from repeating what I see as the worst crime. This is not something I struggle to justify within myself.

Defining what constitutes a murder goes wider, in my view, than specifying which species was killed and determining that the kill was not accidental (manslaughter) or within reasonable force (self defence).

To me murder is the act of killing for revenge.

Also to me, I do not see murder as a terrible crime, because let's face it, if somebody is killed in an act of revenge then there is fairly good odds that they deserved it. Of course that's not always the case, murder can be an over-reaction, in which case it's sick - but if somebody was to murder a rapist out of revenge then I'd not bat an eyelid.

Of course killing for sport or financial gain is just plain wrong, but the serial killers and Harold Shipmans of this world are thankfully a rare bread, and not what i'm discussing here.
Quote from thisnameistaken :That's quite a bold statement. Any evidence to back it up?

No becaus ist completely incorrect animals have more complicated emotions and brains an thoughts then we would think
Quote from tristancliffe :If you have to have a dog put down (for whatever reason), would you ask your vet to do it via injection, or would you use a cheese grater and kill it over a period of days with lots of suffering?

You put an animal down because it is ill enough that it will suffer even more if it is kept alive. When you kill an animal to eat it, it is perfectly healthy. What if people just killed their dog because they didn't want it any more, but they did it via injection.
Quote from wheel4hummer :You put an animal down because it is ill enough that it will suffer even more if it is kept alive. When you kill an animal to eat it, it is perfectly healthy. What if people just killed their dog because they didn't want it any more, but they did it via injection.

That's a bit extreme though, surely? Your pet is in severe pain so you 'put it down', then you may burry it or something.. you don't then eat it.

I don't think it's right to kill any animal to eat it, even though I may be a meat-eater, doesn't mean I agree with it, if you get what I'm saying.
Quote from Becky Rose :I see my cat balance perilously and try to avoid falling every day, there is definately an acknowledgement that if she was to fall she'd be in pain. This trait has remained constant both before and after the time she fell.

It's known as a genetic memory (or meme I believe). It's a purely instinctive reaction to the genes that have been passed on to it by the whole process of evolution. A classic example being: Some birds learn to migrate in summer as those that did were more likely to survive and pass on their genes so this instinctive reaction is passed on to the next generation.

Quote :
Animals can definitely be unhappy, one of my cats used to be my sisters and she was quite happy until my sister got a dog when she became quite noticeably unhappy. I took her into my home and she changed dramatically and is now clearly very happy. The dog, the fear of the dog, clearly effected her mood.

Quote from mookie427 :animals have a whole range of feelings and emotions. There was a scientific study done a few months back which 'discovered' that dogs can get jealous. But this trait is apparent to any dog owner. I know that they get jealous because of my two dogs, if one is getting more affection than the other then they will try and disctract attention away from the one getting more attention.

But however much we try and see animals as 'equal' to humans, the bottom line is they can, like humans have all the emotional responses and senses of danger, anger, fear in the world but the bottom line is they aren't human.

The above statements are classic examples of Anthropomorphism



Quote from CSU1 :
I agree animals don't perceive these complex situations like humans do but I do believe animals have a sense of self mortality and that they can suffer from mental torture though.
Take a basic scenario of mental torture and animals will respond, though they may not know what it is or why it's happening they certainly do suffer mentally.

Define mental torture. I was very careful to use the term "pure mental torture", by which I mean no changes in physical environment. To the best of my knowlege any life form incapable of self awareness can not possibly suffer from pure mental torture. It can only react to a restriction in it's instinctive behaviour. Which is exactly what animals do suffer when caged for example. Despite not being harmed in any other way, they suffer from mental anguish due to the simple fact that their instinct is telling them to behave a certain way and their environment is restricting them from being able to do so.

For example: Put a bear in a cage and it will become "unhappy" if the cage is small and it can't wander around and act in other instintive ways. However, make the cage big enough and fill it with trees and various other things and the bear will be perfectly "happy" there and not show any of the symptoms of mental anguish, (breeding is a very good indicator of an animals sense of "well being"). This is a fact, despite the fact that the cage may well actually be incredibly small in comparison with the natural "territory" such a bear may well have in the wild. BUT, put a human being in a cage and no matter how you dress it up and add things to keep the human "happy" they will always know they are imprisoned and so will suffer mental anguish, (and that's despite the fact that as animals our territories would be far smaller in the wild than that of a bear). This is a critical difference between humans and animals such as bears, and it is down to one thing and that is the sense of self consciousness.

Quote :
TBH that is a really odd way to look at it, you can not justify inflicting pain because you believe there will be no suffering

ehh?? By definition it is suffering that makes it pain !. If there were no suffering it would be just another sense.

Quote from Chrisuu01 :No becaus ist completely incorrect animals have more complicated emotions and brains an thoughts then we would think

Actually I provided perfectly adequate evidence of what I stated.
Quote from gezmoor :A classic example being: Some birds learn to migrate in summer as those that did were more likely to survive and pass on their genes so this instinctive reaction is passed on to the next generation.

Migration is not a 'genetic memory', birds will migrate if they live in an area which is cold enough. E.g. the very same bird, the blackbird, is a migrator in Sweden and not in Italy Even migration paths are learned and transmitted from generation to generation.

Birds (and many other animals) usually adopt a 'best practice' approach which means good behaviors can spread into the population inside the same generation, no need to call genetics in - though that may explain why some individuals are more 'creative' in finding new good behaviors while others are less so inclined.

The less 'creative' inclined subjects can be mistaken for less intelligent, since there's generally a lack of reliable metrics to assess intelligence.

As for instinct vs intelligence it's a debate I wouldn't touch with a 10 ft pole, e.g. I could say love for one's children is a preprogrammed response (=instinct), which is of course partly true, but also hits the mind as a gross overstatement.

Animal Rights
(58 posts, started )
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