That is the exact argument of the article I post in the link up top. Its entitled "We are all Michael Vick" and it says exactly that. Some people get pleasure from dog fight some from eating hamburgers. Its no different.
If that is true than there is no point is having any kind of moral discussion with you because you cannot say anything is immoral. Genocide would not be immoral, female genital mutilation is not immoral, slavery would not be immoral either. So it is pointless to even discuss this. Further how do we even know what a "culture is." Is it a country? Is it just the Southern United States? Is it my neighborhood? Cultural relativism is a stupid moral theory that is rejected by most philosophers.
and it only took you 34 posts to figure out
If that is true than there is no point is having any kind of moral discussion with you because you cannot say anything is immoral. Genocide would not be immoral, female genital mutilation is not immoral, slavery would not be immoral either. So it is pointless to even discuss this. Further how do we even know what a "culture is." Is it a country? Is it just the Southern United States? Is it my neighborhood? Cultural relativism is a stupid moral theory that is rejected by most philosophers.
My point is that it just doesn't apply to animal eating. You're paying $50 a month for internet, why not send that to Estonia to feed some poor family? You're taking the time to post in this forum, why not use that time to help homeless people in your neighborhood? How is your desire to use your money to lead a pleasurable life any different from another person's desire to eat meat?
If that is true than there is no point is having any kind of moral discussion with you because you cannot say anything is immoral. Genocide would not be immoral, female genital mutilation is not immoral, slavery would not be immoral either. So it is pointless to even discuss this. Further how do we even know what a "culture is." Is it a country? Is it just the Southern United States? Is it my neighborhood? Cultural relativism is a stupid moral theory that is rejected by most philosophers.
I was pointing that out as why cultural relativism is a stupid theory, not that I accept it as a legitimate one.
Because I am not causing anyone to suffer by paying $50 a month for internet. Killing something is causing suffering.
Um, what? Do you even realise what you just wrote? I don't know cultural boundaries, but there is a culture gap between USA and Pakistan. That is quite obvious. Morality is different in different cultures. Go on, refute me; try telling me there isn't a difference.
To say that morality is absolute and not relative to cultures (without taking it down the ridiculous "well what if we just all raped looted and pillaged" road) is to say that every other culture in history except for the one you arbitrarily chose for your own personal set of morals (while ignoring the influence your current culture has on those very same morals, whether you admit it or not) was wrong. What knowledge is available to you that was not available to the rest of them? Or are you just that much more enlightened than everyone else?
Long story short, absolutism is arrogance.
Yes, you are not actively causing suffering, but what he was pointing out is that you are choosing to spend that money on your own pleasure instead of using it to potentially alleviate suffering.
My morals don't care about whether or not I eat animals.How do you morally justify eating animals?
Yes we are more enlightened than previous cultures. That is not arrogance it is a fact.
And there is a huge difference between causing suffering and not doing something to potentially alleviate suffering.
My morals don't care about whether or not I eat animals.
Why should they?
Because if you accept that it is morally wrong to cause unnecessary suffering to another thing, than it would be morally wrong to eat animals.
It's not just previous cultures, it's future cultures as well. Those cultures' morals will not be identical to ours. So do we know better than all possible future cultures?
What's the difference? The end result of both is the same: suffering.
My morals don't care about causing suffering to other things as long as it causes me some benefits - eating animals certainly gives me benefits; they taste delicious (usually). Why do you assume that your morals are right?Because if you accept that it is morally wrong to cause unnecessary suffering to another thing, than it would be morally wrong to eat animals.
Yes we are more enlightened than previous cultures. That is not arrogance it is a fact.
First, how do you define "unnecessary"? I agree that causing suffering for no reason other than amusement is wrong, but causing suffering for one's own betterment is just the way things are; everything acts that way, including and especially the animals you seem to care for so much.
I define unnecessary as something that is not needed to be done to survive. And for one's own betterment would seem to also justify slavery.
In the same way that our culture has evolved from previous cultures to become more "enlightened", thus insuring our survivability, why would you not make the same claim about our moral standards also evolving to improve our culture's survivability? You seem to be dead set on believing that there is some absolute moral standard, and I don't think you've yet explained WHY you believe that or WHERE that moral standard comes from. And please don't say god/religion because that's an entirely different debate where you would have to first prove that all that even exists to have any sort of ground to stand on.
It doesn't justify slavery because there is a distinction between what one does to other species and what one does to one's own species throughout the animal kingdom. What I am talking about is how one treats other species. I agree, slavery is not just in the same way slaying people and eating them is not just. However, slavery of animals and slaying/eating them is justifiable because they are a member of a different species.
This is the exact same as how animals treat other members of their own species differently from members of other species.