Terxpahseyton
Nobody
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2006
- Messages
- 10,759
So today I talked to a bunch of new people, and somehow the topic of vegetarianism arose (note I am not a vegetarian).
And then it happened.
The naturality argument entered the room.
My first instinct: Horribly insult this person, perhaps the shock of it can shock him or her out of his or her severe case of "Being opinionated withoutbeing thoughtful doing any thinking"
But naturally, that is not a good way to connect to new people, but still, this instance kept me further occupied for the day and the sheer abundant dumbness of this argument is so striking that I can't help but think: If you use that argument, you expose a general pervasive dumbness which inhibits you.
Is that fair?
First, for the argument's sake, why it is so so dumb:
The argument of naturality with regards to vegetarianism states: Nature intended humans to eat meat. Hence - humans should eat meat.
Nature does not "intend" stuff. Nature is a big pointless senseless mess of crap just happening. In the case of "the" nature - plants and stuff - the sheer abundance of arbitrary elements as well some very lucky exterior conditions (position of the sun etcetera) merely lead to things which appear sensible because there are so many samples to work with and some just have to work out due to mere probability and then start to dominate the system, working out and all. That is how evolution works, anyway.
In the case of the human being, eating meat worked out way better than not eating meat, so humans are "intended" to eat meat.
So why does this mean that we should eat meat nowadays? It may be healthy to do so - but note that is is NOT the argument. Or, you know, you could just say so. No, the argument is a appeal to a higher authority. An authority which is inherently without ANY sense or purpose.
It only even manages to appear as it could make sense by portraying nature as a thinking being, by personalizing it. But that is of course just fantasy BS. If you strip the argument of that personalization - what is left?
"We should eat meat because an arbitrary system made it easy for humans to eat some meat. Am I right?"
Yea.....
So really... how can you be that dumb? I mean if you are 12 or something - I'll give you some slack. You are still in a stage of development where you are more like a parrot than a human.
But being an adult attending a challenging university degree?
As German chancellor Adenauer said: "God really messed up in an instance. Everything he gave limits, just dumbness he allowed to be infinite".
And then it happened.
The naturality argument entered the room.
My first instinct: Horribly insult this person, perhaps the shock of it can shock him or her out of his or her severe case of "Being opinionated without
But naturally, that is not a good way to connect to new people, but still, this instance kept me further occupied for the day and the sheer abundant dumbness of this argument is so striking that I can't help but think: If you use that argument, you expose a general pervasive dumbness which inhibits you.
Is that fair?
First, for the argument's sake, why it is so so dumb:
The argument of naturality with regards to vegetarianism states: Nature intended humans to eat meat. Hence - humans should eat meat.
Nature does not "intend" stuff. Nature is a big pointless senseless mess of crap just happening. In the case of "the" nature - plants and stuff - the sheer abundance of arbitrary elements as well some very lucky exterior conditions (position of the sun etcetera) merely lead to things which appear sensible because there are so many samples to work with and some just have to work out due to mere probability and then start to dominate the system, working out and all. That is how evolution works, anyway.
In the case of the human being, eating meat worked out way better than not eating meat, so humans are "intended" to eat meat.
So why does this mean that we should eat meat nowadays? It may be healthy to do so - but note that is is NOT the argument. Or, you know, you could just say so. No, the argument is a appeal to a higher authority. An authority which is inherently without ANY sense or purpose.
It only even manages to appear as it could make sense by portraying nature as a thinking being, by personalizing it. But that is of course just fantasy BS. If you strip the argument of that personalization - what is left?
"We should eat meat because an arbitrary system made it easy for humans to eat some meat. Am I right?"
Yea.....
So really... how can you be that dumb? I mean if you are 12 or something - I'll give you some slack. You are still in a stage of development where you are more like a parrot than a human.
But being an adult attending a challenging university degree?
As German chancellor Adenauer said: "God really messed up in an instance. Everything he gave limits, just dumbness he allowed to be infinite".