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Post 40

Wednesday, August 17, 2005 - 8:49pmSanction this postReply
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To Sarah,

(The voice of Hanibal Lector)

Very good Clarise,

Thank you for mentioning my restaurant! Would you care for a nice......Chianti?
 Fffffffffffffffff!


                                                      -----


What am I hearing?


(Scene) You and I crashing in the Andes: My last words are - "Sarah? What are you doing with that knife?":-)

                                                       -----

Even if "you" were a retarded, brain dead, gimpy, zombie, Randroid (sorry) - I still wouldn't eat you. I would have to much respect. (Though, Sarah-chops are a tempting morsel!)


I truly believe that no force should be initiated on any human.

Any human...brain damaged, old, young, feeble, fetal, one legged, blind, stupid, Leonard Peikoff, etc, etc, etc.....NO Human!

If I am moral (my standard), I will live by that standard. No exceptions.

The loss of mental capacity does not negate humanity. It may be humane to put a pillow over grandma's face if/when she is suffering or to pull the plug on my own father (happened), but gnawing on either ones pully-bone isn't a moral option.....it ain't gonna happen!

That is my moral standard on this issue.

I speak only for myself.  And I will live by it, NO exceptions!

And

If we ever DO crash in the Andes.......I'm watching you!!!!!!!



Now?

What goes good with Fava Beans? Hmmmmmm!


gw
 
 
P.S. This new Soilent Green I've been hearing about sounds tasty! I wonder what they make it out of?

(Edited by gary williams on 8/17, 8:58pm)


Post 41

Wednesday, August 17, 2005 - 9:28pmSanction this postReply
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Mike,

You answered your own question with "I suspect if Hannibals place existed it would shortly be burned down by large crowds with torches and pitchforks."

I do not necessarily have disdain for emotional decisions; I make them all the time.  They are, I think, inescapable because emotion is such a substantial part of our biology.  I am, however, taking up the no-emotions-allowed position for the sake of this thread.  Emotion-based decisions may lead to what was, in hindsight, a rational decision, but I disagree with you that emotions are reason-based.  Instead, I think that we have created rationalizations for our emotions and so they now appear reason-based.

As for the cannibalism taboo, are you sure about that?  What do you make of the existence of cannibalism in multiple tribal and some chiefdom civilizations?  I have heard many times of cultures believing that a warrior absorbs his opponent's strength by eating, say, his heart.  Of course, communities often considered outsiders to be nonhuman so they may not have considered it cannibalism.  Dare I bring up Peter Singer's circle of ethics idea (or whatever he called it)?  As populations increased our "circle of ethics" expanded to include all humans so then-cannibalism (eating one's family) became now-cannibalism (eating human meat).

Gary,

My point here is: where did your moral standard come from?

Sarah

P.S. I'd more likely use a gun.  I'm not too big so I probably couldn't take you down with a knife. ;)


Post 42

Thursday, August 18, 2005 - 12:17pmSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

where did your moral standard come from?

I don't know....I'm making this up as I go along! :-)

Actually, now bear with me, my standard comes from me. That may sound overly simplistic, but I think it is accurate. I have always done things and thought things my own way. The introduction to Party of One is the best explanation of "me" that I know of.

Even as a snot nosed rug rat I thought about things in what seemed to be a different way from everybody else. I tend to judge stuff quickly, research the crap out'a what I'm not sure of or what I take an interest in, and I don't mind being proven wrong. I have always had run in's with parents, teachers etc...

Where does my standard come from? I'm guessing, but I would think, from many, many sources. As a child, John Wayne movies, Batman, Marlin Perkins, Popeye et al. In latter years, books, books, books! And, just like normal people, the influence of and encounters with other humans was a given. Those encounters faced and still face the harshest judgements. I would and still do, see or hear or read what someone else did or would do, say or think, judge it, add it to my mental library, then move along. In the end, what I agree with and what I disagree with becomes the foundation of my standard.

I do judge quickly, but chew on things (no pun intended) constantly. I spend most of my time alone probing my beliefs, my thoughts, my standards on all subjects. Why? Because I enjoy the shit out of it and because I "want" to be correct.

Right here, right now, with an entire lifetime of influences, encounters and conflicts, I have my standards in place. However, my standards are not set in stone, because every once in a while somebody comes along and blows one of them up and I have to go back to the drawing board.

I am. I think. I judge. I make mistakes. I make corrections. I blunder again. I get spanked. I make corrections. On and on and on... All a process of fine tuning.

Where does my moral standard come from?

Trial and error.

Where does my moral standard come from?

Me!



gw



Edit: Crap! I posted this before I put on my Kevlar! :-0

(Edited by gary williams on 8/18, 12:19pm)


Post 43

Thursday, August 18, 2005 - 1:59pmSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

I do believe my above post is off subject. Sorry!


 Does anyone here have a rational justification for abstaining from cannibalism? 


Ummm.......

Damn it!


No.


gw


(Edited by gary williams on 8/18, 2:02pm)


Post 44

Thursday, August 18, 2005 - 6:11pmSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

"I am, however, taking up the no-emotions-allowed position for the sake of this thread. Emotion-based decisions may lead to what was, in hindsight, a rational decision, but I disagree with you that emotions are reason-based. Instead, I think that we have created rationalizations for our emotions and so they now appear reason-based."

I guess I take a sort of "connections" view of emotions. Some chain of events occurs and gets integrated into our experience and results in a conditioned reaction I call an emotion. And trying to figure out the chain of events and how they got integrated can certainly be called a rationalization. But it doesn't necessarily mean the emotion doesn't have some rational basis. I have a theory that emotions are complex conditioned reactions that HAVE to have a cause. An example: I used to do a lot of sparring in my karate classes years ago. Things happen fast, you don't have time to "reason out" your reaction. Your reactions improve with time, aided by the actual pain induced by wrong reactions. Eventually, with perseverance, you are reacting very well and hardly ever feel the pain of a poor reaction. But you never have the time to "think". But your reactions are very rational. You can react to clues you yourself are not even aware of. Like a persons eyes dilating when they begin to move. It would take a trained scientist and a lot of slow motion photography to figure out all the "reasons" you move the way you do. I think emotions are conditioned reactions as well and we cannot discount that they may have reasons that are not immediately apparent. Thus we "rationalize" them trying to figure them out. New environmental conditions or new information and the application of reason may obsolete an emotion. That's what you're trying to do with this thread I believe. I don't think we really disagree at all. I am, in fact, a strong believer in reason. I can think of another scenario where "cannibalism" might be acceptable. If men ever live in space under indefinite conditions, meaning never return to earth. Nothing can be wasted. If a person dies their body must be recycled and space culture will adapt to that and revere the eating of dead persons.

I have heard of tribes practicing cannibalism but I thought they were a very small minority of "dead end" human cultures. As far as Peter Singer, I've never heard of his "Circle of Ethics" idea. I should read more books [other than electronics engineering].

I've enjoyed this thread and this exchange. Thanks.

Post 45

Thursday, August 18, 2005 - 8:48pmSanction this postReply
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Is this a killer thread or what?

Mike,

 If a person dies their body must be recycled and space culture will adapt to that and revere the eating of dead persons.
Isn't that an assumption? Or assumptions? The eating and the revering?

Also, when you refer to martial arts training you say,

Things happen fast, you don't have time to "reason out" your reaction. Your reactions improve with time, aided by the actual pain induced by wrong reactions.
Martial arts training is mental in as much as it requires discipline. Reason is why you chose to train. You know or think it is beneficial to learn and/or hone martial skills. But the training itself  is primarily about the honing of reflexes. Training reactions. Repeating exercises to "eliminate" thinking. Reflexes are quicker than thinking and therefore beneficial in combat. It's Pavlovian.

I'm just not sure what martial arts training has to do with a rational justification for not eating grandma.

Sarah's question -

Does anyone here have a rational justification for abstaining from cannibalism?
This is a very... good... question. I, personally, ain't ever goin' to eat a Shiavo burger or make a grandma loaf. Why? I don't want to.

But, what I want doesn't answer the question. (Thank you Sarah for this delectable dilemma!)

Using as pure a logic as I can, eliminating all possible emotion and removing all the grossed out, subjective thoughts that I have...I can not find a purely rational justification for not eating non-volitional people.

I will not eat someone, for purely subjective reasons.

However, when faced with dire straits everyone's reason can change..

(Bad) Example - Again, Sarah and I have crashed in the Andes. We both live through the initial crash, but due to boredom we strike up a philosophical discussion. After two hours of my insistence that Homer Simpson is as important as Anneli Rufus, Sarah beats her head repeatedly on the side of the fuselage until she is brain dead. I, faced with a life or death decision in the mountains of death, might give several seconds of thought about living, just a bit longer, by eating the famous Sarah-chops, just in case I might be rescued tomorrow. 

Seriously, put yourself in the situation - If you don't eat Sarah today, your pretty sure you will die today. If you do eat Sarah today, you will live though tomorrow and possibly beyond. Would you still refute cannibalism or would you die. Where would your rationale lead you and why do you choose what you choose? 



Sarah,

First,  I was against eating people.

Then, I was still against eating people.

Now, I am still against eating people.

You have left me with a bit of an Enigma. (Do I fly with you or not?)

 I will spend many hours pondering this. (The eating, not the flying!)

Thanks!


gw







Post 46

Thursday, August 18, 2005 - 9:31pmSanction this postReply
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Ah ha!

Pure reason may have failed me here but objective justification has not:
Cannibalism Normal For Early Humans?

Summary: Genetic markers commonly found in modern humans all over the world could be evidence that our earliest ancestors were cannibals, according to new [as of 2003] research. Scientists suggest that even today many of us carry a gene that evolved as protection against brain diseases that can be spread by eating human flesh.

Good ol' evolutionary psychology.

Sarah


Post 47

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 3:14amSanction this postReply
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Gary,

"Isn't that an assumption? Or assumptions?"

sce·nar·i·o Pronunciation (s-nār-, -när-, -nr-)
n. pl. sce·nar·i·os
3. An outline or model of an expected or supposed sequence of events: "In the scenario posed by many climatologists, decades of continued global warming would raise sea levels anywhere from 20 inches to more than 11 feet" San Francisco Chronicle.

sup·po·si·tion Pronunciation (sp-zshn)
n.
1. The act of supposing.
2. Something supposed; an assumption.

(Not rocket science).

"I'm just not sure what martial arts training has to do with a rational justification for not eating grandma."

The analogy was an attempt to illustrate "emotions" as a very complex conditioned reflex.

A "conditioned" response begs the question "what are the conditions"? The conditions are the situation, the expectations, the elicited emotions, the existing response and the outcome, and the persons ability to reason during the process of integrating the experience into a future response. The motivating factor in creating new response in favor of an old one is our evaluation of the outcome due to the old response. Everything about the person is involved in creating the conditioned response. But it's hard to backtrack. We must simply continue to adapt to new situations.

But if we must "backtrack", that is "rationalize" our conditioned responses, our emotions, you can be sure that somewhere there is reason involved. At least in my world, because of my assumption that people are, on average, rational. I give the existence of our modern world as evidence of this rationality. I.E. the fact that we are having this discussion on the internet.

Post 48

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 3:19amSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

Interesting. Thanks for the link. If cannibalism becomes popular again, I betcha the bodybuilders go first.


Post 49

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 7:04amSanction this postReply
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Mike,

Thank you, but I have a dictionary!:-)

In your space scenario, perhaps I did use the wrong term - assumption. I should have said that the eating of and revering of eating dead astronauts was presumptuous conjecture. Where is the proof that they will eat and revere? What data are you using?

In your climatologist example in post 47, the climatologists are offering a hypothesis based on collected data.  What data do you possess about the astronaut buffet?

Hey, your right this isn't Rocket Science!



As for your martial arts example -

Great, we can think.

Great, we have emotions.

Great, we know karate.

Great, we have a dictionary. (sorry!)

You still haven't given a valid, "Objective," rational justification for abstaining from cannibalism.

(Me smiling!) Please do not start a semantics war on this thread. I may know more English than you give me credit for. And Rocket Science!

And, please, please, please don't take this post the wrong way. If you can answer Sarah's question, please do. I want to know! Maybe you could use widdle werds so I can keeps up! (I'm only ribbing you man!)


gw 



Post 50

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 7:07amSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

Some Objectivists (very few, so far as I know) think taste preferences are determined rationally. If you can rationally explain why the esthetics of salad X are better than the esthetics of salad Y, then perhaps you'll have a rational basis upon which to explain why eating other stuff is in most cases better than eating other humans.

Aside, why do you care about this issue?

Jordan


Post 51

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 8:00amSanction this postReply
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gary,

Your jib jabs are not a substitute for a real discussion. I know you're trying to be entertaining. If you can't figure out what I tried to say from what I've posted so far, I'm afraid I can't do anymore for you. I'm sure you know lots of words and know how to read a dictionary so perhaps asking me if I was making an "assumption" when I introduced an idea as a "scenario" was just laziness on your part.

I gave "fear of retribution" and "fear of disease" as possible rational reasons in an earlier post. And I've also argued that these fears very likely have rational roots. These reasons have been disallowed in the context of Sarah's argument.

I've already conceded to Sarah, with examples, that there may be contexts where it is not irrational, even reasonable, for people to eat human flesh.

Be well.

Mike E.

Sanction: 5, No Sanction: 0
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Post 52

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 9:02amSanction this postReply
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Jordan,

Despite my efforts the thread has been sidetracked onto cannibalism; I think Mike is just perpetually hungry :).  The cannibalism is not important.  The original intent of this thread was to find an extension of ethics based on volitional rationality to humans who are neither volitional or rational, e.g. incurably mentally retarded.  It's a hole in my ethics as well as, near as I can tell, Objectivist ethics.  That is why I care.

Sarah


Post 53

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 12:19pmSanction this postReply
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Sarah,

I was appealing to your original intent in my last post. If esthetics can be rational or irrational, and if taste is part of esthetics, then taste can be rational or irrational. To follow the irrational would be immoral. So is it irrational (i.e., immoral) in terms of esthetics to eat the mentally retarded or the senile? I don't accept the link between esthetics and ethics like this, but some Objectivists do. I throw it out there in case it appeals to you as an alternative method by which to answer your question.

Anyway, it still looks like you're confusing moral agents with moral patients.

Jordan


Post 54

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 12:22pmSanction this postReply
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Jordan,

What do esthetics have to do with ethics?

More on moral agents/patients later.

Sarah


Post 55

Friday, August 19, 2005 - 2:33pmSanction this postReply
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Sarah,
What do esthetics have to do with ethics?
Although I don't agree with them, some folks think that we can rationally or irrationally choose our esthetics. If we have the option to be rational or irrational, then we have the option to be ethical or unethical. So if the esthetic choice of eating the senile or mentally retarded is irrational, then it's unethical.

Here're some examples of what people claim are rational (hence, ethical) choices in esthetics: (1) preferring Rachmaninoff to Beethoven; (2) preferring Vermeer to Herring; (3) preferring the wine you get in a bottle to the wine you get in a box.

Jordan


Post 56

Saturday, August 20, 2005 - 4:07pmSanction this postReply
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Mike E.,

According to the SOLO rule book, jib jabing is allowed. You will find it under the Entertainment section.

By the way, I think you should look into reading Harry G. Frankfurt's newest offering. It's sooo.... you!


 Be well.
Right back at ya!



Ta, Ta! Back to the kiddie table for me. I'll let you grown up's continue!


gw
 
 
 




Post 57

Saturday, August 20, 2005 - 9:21pmSanction this postReply
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"What Is Human?"
    ....is the heading-name for this thread.
   
    This is like Plato's old Socratic question-style of "What Is A Chair?" (with all of Socrate's discombobulating questions for others re definitions and usage of the term.) Properly, such a question should be re-formed as either "When *I* use the term, what do *I* really mean?" or, "When they say 'Grok,' just what do they seem to be referring to?" (or worse: "They're using my term pretty strangely; what do *they* mean?)--- Clearly, the term 'human' is not confusingly-unknown enough to fall under my 2nd example; ergo, properly it primarily falls under the 1st (though in this thread, the 3rd question becomes relevent too.)
   
    As far as I'm concerned, the 1st question (my only concern here) is properly re-phrased as "What (for my knowledge-context) should I define as 'human'?" followed by "Isn't a dictionary def good enough, or need I go 'normative' on it?"
   
    Re the term 'human,' I see, so far, no need to go 'normative' on the accepted def : 'rational animal.'
   
    However, what Sarah (who started this thread) follows up with as presumably related questions boggles my mind, as to their 'relatedness.'

Sarah: 
"...is it ok to eat a brain-dead person? Or grandma with alzheimer's?"

I don't recall ever having read an Objectivist position on ethics regarding the retarded, senile, etc. Anyone have anything for me?





~~ It dawns on me that you are asking, to put it more succinctly, not "What Is Human?" but, "Is it ethically allowable to kill (by 'eat,' I presume that you don't mean 'alive') those who have what's presently measurable as a less-than-a-'100'-IQ?" (due to brain-dysfunction from-whatever-cause, disease/accident/genetic.)
    
    Or, more succinctly, "Are those with less than 100IQ properly called 'Human'?"
    
    Correct? I'll presume so.
     
    Even here, your question is still unclear (re 'retarded' especially) as to being measured by which tests given by which groups, since we all know that a 95 here is a 101 there and maybe a 115 elsewhere...don't we?   
    
    As well, we know that any IQ test today for most may show a declined-score re any given 30 yrs ago to the same person, regardless of brain-deficiency acquisition...right?
    
    Finally, we agree that a test given to a "100IQ" 10-yr old  clearly doesn't imply that they are as smart (trivia/'fact' knowledge), or even as intelligent (problem/puzzle-solving), nevermind other 'dimensions',  as 1) they will (not might) be at 21yrs, or 2) your average presently-21-yr-old with "100IQ"...I hope. (Or, possibly, all 'children' get thrown in grandma's stew?)

~~ Well, true, O'ism never tackled these questions of yours on grandma or the 'retarded' (I further guess, hopefully correctly, that you mean ONLY the 'intellectually' retarded). But then, they never tackled any questions on those in a coma, even, nor those asleep, much less those who never had a civilized education. I would guess, probably, because ALL are presumed to still possess a consciousness, and, if considered as a physical 'human,' have the capability of rationality to-some-degree; ergo, they are still a 'rational animal.' --- An aside: 'retarded' refers to those who learn slower; not to those imagined as having stopped at some limited amount of knowledge forevermore. All of us on this forum are 'retarded' compared to Stephen Hawking, da Vinci, Rand, Jefferson, and a few others including whoever invented the wheel, not because we know less than them, but because they learned, hence saw things, faster than we (hence, they would be 'smarter' too, secondarily.) Too many ignoramusi who know nothing (and care to learn as much) about mental development throw around the term 'retarded' as meaning nothing more than "Those who ain't as smart as *me.*" Now, I'm sure that you're not one of those, but watch out for others responding who show that that's their interpretation. They're advertising that they are thereby choosing to fit into their self-limited-idea of 'retarded.' Anyhoo...
    
    Those with Alzheimers are those with a consciousness ('thing/attribute'/whatever-in-this-context) and still capable of rationality, even when, sometimes, not up to the degree of what one is aware that they used to be.
    
    Those with an 'IQ' of 99.999....or less, see above.
     
    Those asleep, or in a coma (not to be confused with 'brain-dead') possess a consciousness, though they're not momentarily in the state where its operating; hence, see above.
    
    Those who are unequivocably 'brain-dead,' (not 'more-or-less')...are, consciousness-wise...D-E-A-D; any possible-futuristic stimulation of brain-stem cells to grow new/more neurons at best would be creating a brain for a new person, not rehabilitating the old one who's gone. --- Some poster referred to being 'almost brain-dead'; this reminds me of The Princess Bride where someone agrees with another that a 3rd is dead, "...but not COMPLETELY dead!" Let's keep our terms straight, ok? Brain-dead is brain-dead; add 'almost' and we're not talking the same thing anymore.

~~A word (ok: a few) on how *I* use, and see as meant, the term 'rationality'--- if Rand, accepting Aristotle's definition of 'rational animal,' really meant 'ratiocinating animal,' she would have specified such, somewhere. Ergo, I see her meaning of 'rational' as including (though not necessarily implying; that's for Piaget) the idea that children are 'rational,' (I daresay infants e-v-e-n...'to a degree/point'). They are merely not 'conceptually-rational,' that is, up to using syllogisms or if-then conjunction-logic (well, other than prodigies.) Methinks that too many people, including self-styled "O'ists", are myopic on this point.
    
    For an understanding of pre-conceptual 'rationality' (as contrasted with ratiocination), see Jean Piaget's longtitudinal studies (pb books:check Google) re the development in young children of the concepts re time/space/causality/'object-permanence'(aka 'identity')/etc...as well as 'personal-morality' and language-use including abstract 'indefinite' pronouns; he covers the childrens' evolution from pre-conceptualness to ratiocination. --- There is more to 'rationality' than Mr. Spock, Data, 7-of-9, Euclid, Dirac, or, generally, conceptually-controlled->language, math, deduction or induction (the latter 2 can be pre-conceptual 'logic' as well as post-). Indeed, the latter 4 require 'rationality' to already exist to-learn-to conceptualize them; else, they couldn't be l-e-a-r-n-e-d. --- I stress:  ratiocination is not synonomous with rationality, present-day deduction-oriented math-logic professors'-myopia nwst.--- Addendum: Rand described/(defined?) volition as "...a function of rationality." I buy this, but, it's mucho food for thought, esp re what I've just explained. I'm not clear if an ET can be considered 'rational' without such implying some degree of volition, in which case any talk about 'rationality' AND 'volition,' as if each needs to be specified, might not be actually redundant. (P.S: computers and robots as-they-are [AI wet-daydreams nwst] operate 'logically,' but, not 'rationally'; I don't think AI'rs know the difference.)
~~Finally, the subject of 'cannibalism' per se:
    
    I see nothing immoral (Soylent Green nwst) about it. Any murdering (a la Hannibal Lector) for it is what'd be immoral (eh, maybe depending on just who is 'murdered,' and why); but the act itself? No more than burying or cremating...or feeding to animals (including us). Such merely has to do with rituals re 'respect' for the memory of the deceased, and forms-of-'respect' are always personal. Indeed, re this latter...'respect' CAN include cannibalism in certain rare situations (you and your two 5yr-old twins survive in a small-plane crash in the mts and your spouse's last breath says "Don't let them starve waiting for rescue. You know what I mean! Promise me!") OTOH, I'd have no moral prob dis-respectfully eating Hitler's (or Idi Amin's) heart (stomach prob, yes, but...)

     Well, that covers your 1st post.

~~Then you follow up with:
"....cognitive abilities...are...arbitrary."
     True, I condensed your multi-sentence response to another, but, this belief is as I understand your meaning.
         If cognitive abilities are arbitrary, then, what could possibly be considered 'relevent' (ie: non-arbitrary) to any ethical-conundrum questions, or to ethics at all for that matter? Nothing, that I can see, which makes any questions on ethics pointless to begin with. If you don't accept Rand's delineation of connections/justifications re ethics (and inherent rights) to one's mind/consciousness/rationality/volitionalness, hence their connection to 'cognitive abilities,' (not to mention, more to the point, the contrary) then I am perplexed as to what you're looking for in THIS forum.






The responders to Sarah: (re varied related points brought up)
    
    1) Mutating present species (such as Primates) to a recognizable level of 'rationality' equivalent to humans (a la Planet of the Apes) --- First, I'm aware of KoKo, Washoe, etc., as well as Lilly's studies of Dolphins, all of which have nothing to do with mutations, but show that intensive 'educating' of present apparently highly-'intelligent' (depending on one's definition of THAT term) animals have results that are chronically unclear re their ability to learn abstract concepts (shades of Rand's 'missing link' reference). That is, to learn without continual 'prodding' of use to any point of advancing beyond a minimal lowest apparent-to-some level. Second, any 'technological' mutating (genetic, cyborg, etc) is a whole different world, and then IF the mutated ones show a comparable ability to acquire/learn new (excuse me Sarah) 'cognitive' and, ergo, abstracting abilities...we're talking a whole new MUTATED species, non? Ed Thompson pointed out a relevent distinction to keep in mind here (though applicable elsewhere): 'sentient' vs.'sapient.' In short, at this point, "No more 'Mr. Nice Chimp'" (I guess we'd call them The Anthropoid 'X-Men'.) And, they will not be on the same par as those not-so-'mutated.' Indeed, such a difference may be equivalent (NOT "identical") to what I regard as the difference between a human fetus and a human baby. Ah-h, next point...
    
    2) Human Fetus and Human Baby. --- Which one has what *you* are willing to call a 'consciousness'? I'll accept that it's a 'grey-area' (insufficient data=unknown) re a tri-mester fetus possessing a consciousness, but not to the point of legally-penalizing a gestator beyond 'forced' birth. Strictly speaking, I'm against that as well, but can understand 'force' ONLY to that point. More is needed to biologically define how to recognize the actual possession of a consciousness. But I stress here and now: if it's got a human brain, AND it has a  consciousness, it is a  'rational,' (as I've explained by *my* argument/meaning of 'rational' above) one.
   
    3) Should we be talking 'human' or mere 'person'? --- such would help prepare us for the 1st "I, Robot" that gets (supposedly) created, or the 1st ET we meet, but, at this time of our history where both seem to be in the far future, I see no difference in using either questioned term. So far, 'human'='person.' The prob is clarity in Identification...beyond the mere physical.
   
    4) REFRAIN:::Grandma's Brain-Dead & the Zombie-Ghoul Body-Eaters --- If one really feels a preference for this diet (which we won't see on the Food Channel, I'm sure, Hannibal and his fava-beans nwst), as far as I'm concerned the eater and the eatee both have the same named prob...except one of them watched too many of those movies, thus making...it...that way. Otherwise, I see no immorality; a lotta grossness (especially if uncooked), yes, but no more immoral than one's eating a desert-snake alive after one's crawled for 4 days with no food. There IS however, the idea of 'respect,' which may, or may not, be deservedly-appropriate towards the eaten. This should cover Terri Schiavo...and, contrarily, a lot of politicians. P.S: Terri had no brain left. See "2)" above.
   
    5) Cannibal-gene --- Too bad we don't have genes for avoiding other probs, like...getting sucked into pointless forum-debates. Someone commented that if the world goes 'cannibal' Body-Builders'd be the 1st to go. Uh-h-h, nope; they're the high-protein oriented ones. They'd be the LAST to go, and the 1st to start lurching...and munching (Maybe I will get that Bow-Flex I been thinkin' about.)

~~~Finally, my own question re this whole subject, "What is 'human,'" and "Why not be a cannibal?" Indeed, my question raises the very idea of "Would cannibalism include...THIS?"
     
    Recently a movie came out called The Island; haven't seen it, but, understand it's about wealthy people (who else would be 'evil,' huh?) who pay for an island-proprietor to keep a clone of the payer there for, oh, any medical emergencies. Prob is, the clones (thinking they're living in some benevolent society) are all...undistinguishable by any measurement...from your usual anonymous stranger: physically and mentally 'human.' They're picked to be killed and used for the payer's medical use. OK, I got my answers for such. However, way-ahead-of-its-time, in 1971, a made-for-tv movie (w/Leslie Nielson) was  called The Resurrection of Zachary Wheeler and is similar to the above movie except that the 'clones' have no functioning brain. They walk around as if lobotomized. True, those poor unfortunates actually born with only a brain-stem do die soon after birth, but...the idea of purposefully keeping such...
    
    MY Question: Would using such 'cloned,' non-brain,  mere physical-bodies (whether kept in refrigerated stasis or whatever) for eating, be cannibalistic in an immoral way? If so, would keeping them even for medical emergencies be immoral? I stress, I'm asking about 'immoral' from the context of O'ist ethics...not any and all possible other ones.

     Hope I've given some food for thought (and, maybe an 'answer' or two...to some.)

LLAP
J-D

(Edited by John Dailey on 8/20, 10:23pm)

(Edited by John Dailey on 8/20, 11:30pm)

(Edited by John Dailey on 8/20, 11:31pm)

(Edited by John Dailey on 8/21, 12:27pm)


Post 58

Sunday, August 21, 2005 - 5:45amSanction this postReply
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Hey John D,
For an understanding of pre-conceptual 'rationality' (as contrasted with ratiocination), see Jean Piaget's longtitudinal studies (pb books:check Google) re the development in young children of the concepts re time/space/causality/'object-permanence'(aka 'identity')/etc...as well as 'personal-morality' and language-use including abstract 'indefinite' pronouns...
Several animals have passed Piaget's stages as much as many human kids have, so this pre-conceptual rationality can also be applied to animals, yes? If not, why not? If so, then "rational animal" isn't the best definition.
Would using such 'cloned,' non-brain,  mere physical-bodies (whether kept in refrigerated stasis or whatever) for eating, be cannibalistic in an immoral way? If so, would keeping them even for medical emergencies be immoral? I stress, I'm asking about 'immoral' from the context of O'ist ethics...not any and all possible other ones.
To me, this is no different from cloning my organs in a petri dish, which medical science is getting better and better at each day. The only difference is that my organs in your hypo conveniently form in the shape of a very handsome human, sans an even more handsome brain. The O'ist maxim: "sacrifice not self to others, nor others to self" would not be violated here because the other, my clone, would have no self for me to sacrifice. So far as I know, a self needs a consciousness needs a brain.

Jordan


Post 59

Sunday, August 21, 2005 - 9:55amSanction this postReply
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Holy lack of white space, Batman. John, it'll take some time to get through your post, if I ever decide to try.

Sarah

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