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The difference between a Cow and a Gorilla in terms of the sophistication of their social relationships, and overall intelligence is quite a big gap. I think if you have a humanistic approach and value sentience then animals like dolphins and other apes should be respected and protected in ways that are different from other animals (especially those domesticated and unable to be integrated into a natural context due to human artificial selection).In many parts of the world people eat apes.
Is eating apes the same as eating other animals, or should apes be regarded as special and therefore not be eaten?
Pets and apes that are kept in cages then killed: no.
Wild apes or apes that die of old age: yes.
I do not think it is unthinkable to eat wild apes, but it is mean to keep them as pets, lab animals or zoo animals and then turn around and betray them by killing them for food. There's something wrong with that.
Provided that you make me your king for life and pay me taxes, you may rely upon my judgment in all things.So we can hunt them but not farm them?
Provided that you make me your king for life and pay me taxes, you may rely upon my judgment in all things.
I would eat it perhaps and probably would not like it. I have tried alligator, frog, crab, scallop and rabbit. I do not like any of them. Apes are just animals, but if they make an attachment to people then they are more than just animals to me. I think that is how it should be and they should not be food for humans at that point. Like, I would not eat Mr. Chips.Haha, OK, let me rephrase. Would you eat hunted ape but not farmed ape?
Cows and gorillas are equally sentient, though gorillas seem to be more sapient. That said, I don't think intelligence is necessarily the best factor to consider in determining our moral relationship with other animals.The difference between a Cow and a Gorilla in terms of the sophistication of their social relationships, and overall intelligence is quite a big gap. I think if you have a humanistic approach and value sentience then animals like dolphins and other apes should be respected and protected in ways that are different from other animals (especially those domesticated and unable to be integrated into a natural context due to human artificial selection).
Apes look too much like me.
Would you fry me up for a nosh?
Why, if I might ask?I eat certain animals but would shun eating an ape, monkey, orang,
etc.
Why, if I might ask?
So the "ick" factor. Kind of subjective, IMHO.They look like short hairy people
So there's a hierarchy of edibility, based on intelligence (and ickyness, of course).They have been portrayed as quite intelligent.
Yes -- taboo #6.Same reason I'd balk at eating my dog, your dog, any dog.
Or house cat for that matter.
Kind of a social taboo.
But I'm an ape -- and icky! (everybody says so).Don't bring up "what if you were starving to death either.
Were that a fact I'd kill and eat you. Nothing personal.
How come? Wouldn't an animals intellect mean varying degrees of suffering in the same conditions? Or do you think only physical suffering exists in non-human animals?I don't think this should be a factor in determining moral propriety.
I think what he was trying to convey was that if that if the animal has sentience, then they most likely feel pain regardless of their intelligence.How come? Wouldn't an animals intellect mean varying degrees of suffering in the same conditions? Or do you think only physical suffering exists in non-human animals?