I stopped reading your post here, because what you said is so ridiculous.
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Yeah, Aristotle’s a dumbass.
An inability to discuss this in a real philosophical sense—to back up claims of animal ‘morality’ with substance rather than sentiment—does not reflect well on your part.
When my dog cries when I leave the house, is she acting on instinct?
Yes. It is sentimentalism on your part to believe a dog is crying because of your absence. It’s sublimation and fetishism (as Freud might respond), and lots of other psychological associations and aspects.
It does not, however, have anything to do with a dog having any kind of morality. Even if a dog were to cry in reaction to a situation, it has nothing to do with “right and wrong”; it has as much to do with it as taking a shit on the lawn or becoming aroused in certain times/at certain situations.
Just dismissing animals by saying "they act on instinct" is rather simplistic don't you think. What is instinct exactly? As a veterinary student and someone who has studied animal behavior, I can tell you that it is not easily defined, nor is anything associated with complex brain function.
It is behavior based in no abstract contemplation. The urge to procreate/have sex is instinct; there is no thought involved.
This should be fairly obvious.
Human 'characteristics' you say? So you think all of our characteristics are unique to us? Every one of them? Newsflash....Humans and Chimpanzees share 95% similarity in DNA.
This completely mishandles the post you were responding to:
The problem with 'animal rights' is the fact the human beings project human characteristics onto their pets and those animals become equal to them in their eyes.
This is basically saying that individuals project emotions onto pets that aren’t really there. These projected emotions take the form of the build-up of concepts having to do with the animal’s similarity to the owner (in whatever form).
Whether or not Chimpanzees and Humans have 95% similarity in DNA is not the issue. Both humans and mice have feet; this has nothing to do with the psychology of the situation.
I thought this was particularly, out of this entire thread, correct also:
Well animals do have similar emotions to human beings, the fundamental difference between human beings and other mammels is forsight. Animals can learn, and can also act out of instinct. Their emotions evolved much the same way ours did. To reward good action, and to repremand bad action. Animals however have no concept of "the future" That is why they don't bury their dead. We are the only species on the planet that is capable of understanding our own death. Animals can learn, and can be very intellegent, but they are not able to apply their learned concepts to untested, future based ideas.
and
Animals are easy to defend because they seem so innocent when placed within our own standards. No vegetarian condems a lion for eating a zebra though.
I don't understand this statement:
Just fyi, on a quantitative level. We have much more evidence of evolution than we do of a Solar-Centric System.
Sentient? Words are human concepts. Words have definitions which are themselves made up of words. They are simply a tool to communicate. For you to simply dismiss animals as not being "sentient" is a ridiculous argument.
Sentient in the sense of rationality based in abstract conception. Ants communicate. By your manner of thought, ants would be sentient.
They are not.