Sinergy
Posts: 9383
Joined: 4/26/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY Sure, in an evolutionary sense, we certainly are. So, where do "rights" come from? And if you want to make the argument that since we are "just animals", what "rights" does evolution give us, or any other animals? FirmKY Interesting point. I had a thought reading this about the problem that the military has had for eons in training people to kill other people. Unless you subscribe to some religious or moral belief system, there tends to not be a restriction on killing one's own species. Yet, people put in an adrenalized situation where they are taking a human life, and they frequently experience all sorts of physical and psychological stresses from taking a human life. This spans religions, societies, cultures, whatever. Jared Diamond discusses it somewhat in The Third Chimpanzee, where he examines a lot of human mores like monogamy, incest, etc., from the standpoint of what evolutionary advantage this sort of thing has. As far as the topic, I tend to follow the precept that I have binocular vision and canine teeth. I dont go out and gratuitously slaughter Bambi, but if I was in a situation where I had to (and I lived off the land with the 10 essentials for a month when I graduated high school) Bambi would be renamed dinner. What I abhor is waste. People are overpopulating the system space and driving out all the other species. Taking this out to it's logical conclusion results in people killing everything else and then turning on each other. This might be prevented if some disease (i.e. Nature steps in) and levels the playing field. I dont personally think a particular animal has any more right to be here than any other animal, but as Agent Smith pointed out in The Matrix, people grow and expand and destroy their environment, similar to a virus. \ Sinergy
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"There is a fine line between clever and stupid" David St. Hubbins "This Is Spinal Tap" "Every so often you let a word or phrase out and you want to catch it and bring it back. You cant do that, it is gone, gone forever." J. Danforth Quayle
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