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Any Vegetarians/Vegans here?
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(January 31, 2014 at 2:04 pm)Raeven Wrote: Ut-oh. You do realise there are 12 pages to the article? On the second page the author writes regarding the scientists working on plant signalling that... "No one I spoke to in the loose, interdisciplinary group of scientists working on plant intelligence claims that plants have telekinetic powers or feel emotions." (emphasis added) Now, lets look at one of the best pieces of evidence that the author presents. I would say this is the example of a Mimosa plant, which rapidly move their leaves in response to touch. The experiment the author describes consists of dropping the mimosa 15cm, movement which causes the plant to retract its leaves. However, when one drops the plant a number of times it "learns" that it does not need to retract its leaves and so stops. This type of learning is in fact just habituation, and can be encoded by a simple long-term negative feedback mechanism leading to de-sensitisation. It in no way implies perception. Associative learning is the real marker of the beginnings of intelligence. For that the plant would have to associate a neutral stimuli (say a smell or Light/dark) with a positive or negative reward. If the plant could then move its leaves to this neutral stimuli then one could say it had learned something and is not just de-sensitising. AND EVEN THEN, just because they can do that does not mean they have episodic memory and are able to integrate the what, where and when of experiences, which is a key marker of consciousness. The case in point would be Drosophila, which despite there ability to learn associatively they do not have episodic memory. Anyway, the idea of plants being able to perceive pain is so nonsensical it even has it's own page debunking the idea in Skepdic.com If you are going to post evidence in support of a theory, then you should really try to find primary evidence, or at the very least the opinion of an agreed authority.
I just thought it was an interesting article. And I did read all 12 pages of it. I'm sorry if that's 10 more than you're prepared to read.
(January 31, 2014 at 12:17 pm)jg2014 Wrote: Killing for biodiversity is certainly more justified than the murder of animals just to eat them, however the fact remains there are better ways to achieve this end. e.g. supporting the return of predatorsI keep shaking my head at the things you say. I know you realize the predators are just going to eat the animals. I can't understand why you are good with that but are against humans eating them. You make no sense at all. You really don't. You come up with some bullshit concocted explanation that is just down right dumb. Amoral vs moral. So if I share a meal of meat that my dog and I hunted together I am doing something wrong but my dog is good to go. Stupid!
I think we should feed jg2014 to a predator. It would solve all problems outlined in this thread.
Since the predator is amoral it would be ok.
(January 31, 2014 at 6:22 pm)KUSA Wrote: Since the predator is amoral it would be ok. We can also follow JG2014's example, and forget the fundamental reason why can even be justified to impose a system of morality in the first place, and simply assert any morality for whatever reason that pleases us. In this case, it pleases me to assert a morality that that allows me to entertain myself by watching JG2014 get eaten. (January 31, 2014 at 12:17 pm)jg2014 Wrote:Thank you!(January 31, 2014 at 12:18 am)Tripwire Wrote: I am 16 and cannot afford a vegan diet, so I eat anything I can get as of now. When I turn 18 I hope to become one.
GROOVY
RE: Any Vegetarians/Vegans here?
January 31, 2014 at 11:46 pm
(This post was last modified: February 1, 2014 at 12:09 am by bennyboy.)
(January 31, 2014 at 4:26 pm)Raeven Wrote: I just thought it was an interesting article. And I did read all 12 pages of it. I'm sorry if that's 10 more than you're prepared to read. You didn't link it because you "just thought it was an interesting article," unless you got lost and ended up here by accident. I'm assuming you are arguing that since plants can also feel, vegetarians are hypocritical in refusing to participate in the suffering of animals. If so, you might want to provide a quoted section FROM the link, which you feel supports that position. (January 31, 2014 at 4:44 pm)KUSA Wrote:I have a few things to say about this. First of all, hunting by all other animals is part of the evolutionary process of the prey as well as the hunters. Second, the way in which that hunting is done has a tendency (usually) to arrive at some kind of equilibrium in an ecosystem. Humans, having learned how to manipulate the evolution of livestock, have completely nerfed them, to the point that they are no longer viable organisms. Also, where there are very bad imbalances in natural ecosystems, this is very often due to a human presence: killing of predators like wolves and foxes, or destroying habitat.(January 31, 2014 at 12:17 pm)jg2014 Wrote: Killing for biodiversity is certainly more justified than the murder of animals just to eat them, however the fact remains there are better ways to achieve this end. e.g. supporting the return of predatorsI keep shaking my head at the things you say. I'm not actually against hunting, in particular of species that have overrun ecosystems (like deer in the States). Eventually, all imbalances bring suffering-- through starvation, or through the destruction of foliage to the point that OTHER species lose their respective habitats. If so, reducing pests, even if they suffer when they are shot, can arguably reduce the overall suffering, even of the pest species, by ensuring that their ecosystems recover and survive. But genetically-altered livestock, held in unnatural and unpleasant conditions, and killed to feed people who are overeating just for pleasure, is disrespectful both to the individual animals and to the millions of years of struggle that led to the species' evolution. We are deliberately CREATING a resource-wasting overpopulation of livestock-- which is especially retarded given the millions of pest animals (like deer) who are destroying many parts of the world. Just because there is suffering in the world, and some justified or even necessary, doesn't mean we should raise (and inflict suffering on) millions of cattle to overfeed millions of 300-lb fatasses. There's nothing natural or right about the current state of things. I wouldn't say that eating meat is necessarily immoral, but I would suggest that eating at McDonald's, or any restaurant which purchases meat from these mass-production facilities, IS immoral. (January 31, 2014 at 11:46 pm)bennyboy Wrote:(January 31, 2014 at 4:26 pm)Raeven Wrote: I just thought it was an interesting article. And I did read all 12 pages of it. I'm sorry if that's 10 more than you're prepared to read. So what we are doing is (gulp) unnatural? Dang I hate it when I do something unnatural. Thank you for pointing this out with your appeal to nature. |
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