• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Mankind's Inherent Value

Who do you spare?

  • I would save mankind and destroy all other life

    Votes: 2 15.4%
  • I would save all other life and destroy mankind

    Votes: 11 84.6%

  • Total voters
    13

Soandso

ᛋᛏᚨᚾᛞ ᛋᚢᚱᛖ
Imagine a scale of inherent value. Directly in the middle of this scale is all of mankind

------ Higher

------ Mankind

------ Lower

Where do you place life outside of mankind on this scale? Do you place all other life on this planet above mankind in importance, does it have the same importance to you, or is everything else less important to you than mankind?

With your answer in mind I want you to answer another question for me. Let's say you were forced to make a decision; you have to either push a button that would wipe out all other life on earth and save mankind only, or push the other button that would wipe out mankind and spare all other life on the planet. In this hypothetical scenario, if one chooses to save mankind then man would be able to persist and thrive without other life existing just fine. What do you choose and why?
 

bobhikes

Nondetermined
Premium Member
Imagine a scale of inherent value. Directly in the middle of this scale is all of mankind

------ Higher

------ Mankind

------ Lower

Where do you place life outside of mankind on this scale?
I believe all life is equal but I have the right to protect mine above all others. I believe this is true of all life on the planet which is why survival of the fittest seems to be the standard.
 

PureX

Veteran Member
It's not humankind per se that is inherently valuable, it's conscious awareness. So to the degree that any life form is consciously aware, it is inherently valuable to the rest if existence. Because it is through such life forms that existence becomes aware of itself.
 
Last edited:

Quintessence

Consults with Trees
Staff member
Premium Member
Also, setting aside that elevating humans above literally all other life is so abjectly disgusting and abominable it is one of the very few instances where I will use the extreme term of EVIL to describe it...

... humans literally cannot exist without other life. There is no viable hypothetical scenario where that isn't the case. Humans are obligate heterotrophs. They MUST kill other living things to survive. If they don't need to kill others to live, then you are not talking about a human anymore, you are talking about some other life form entirely.
 

Secret Chief

Veteran Member
Where do you place life outside of mankind on this scale? Do you place all other life on this planet above mankind in importance, does it have the same importance to you, or is everything else less important to you than mankind?
Equal.


if one chooses to save mankind then man would be able to persist and thrive without other life existing just fine
Yes, hypothetical since it's nonsensical.

Save all other species. No single species is "more important." Any one species can become extinct and of course they do, but only one could become extinct which would result in a reversal of the ongoing destruction of the biosphere. So yes let's get rid of that disastrous infestation.
 

Secret Chief

Veteran Member
Beings who build skyscrapers and write books and stuff
meh

I like the species we have :)

IMG_7773.jpeg
 

Debater Slayer

Vipassana
Staff member
Premium Member
Also, setting aside that elevating humans above literally all other life is so abjectly disgusting and abominable it is one of the very few instances where I will use the extreme term of EVIL to describe it...

What context do you have in mind here? For instance, I'm fairly sure you have friends or acquaintances who eat meat, but would you equally be okay with befriending or being acquaintances with a bunch of cannibals?

That and, of course, humans' sustenance inevitably entails one degree or another of death or suffering to other life forms, as you well know. Even the most eco-friendly diets and lifestyles can't prevent this; they merely reduce it. So when we inevitably sustain ourselves at the expense of other life forms, are we necessarily elevating our value above theirs?

Parenthetically, I will note that I don't believe in ranking the perceived value of different species, as I believe such a question is ultimately bound to be subjective. I believe humans should definitely do much more to respect other life and not see ourselves as "superior" or "more valuable" than other life such that we routinely feel justified in destroying their habitats, subjecting them to preventable death and suffering, or driving them to extinction.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Here for the ride
Premium Member
I see all life as sacred and worth protecting. I personally view the scenario presented in the OP as unnecessary. All we have to do is build somesort of genetic ark where we stored the genetic material of all species on this planet. So if something happens and they go extinct, they can be brought back later in a lab. So even if we had to do something as horrendous as killing all the life on Earth, the species won't be lost forever. But I don't like those sorts of hypotheticals as they try to force you to choose between two equally disagreeable choices.
 

Left Coast

This Is Water
Staff member
Premium Member
Imagine a scale of inherent value. Directly in the middle of this scale is all of mankind

------ Higher

------ Mankind

------ Lower

Where do you place life outside of mankind on this scale? Do you place all other life on this planet above mankind in importance, does it have the same importance to you, or is everything else less important to you than mankind?

With your answer in mind I want you to answer another question for me. Let's say you were forced to make a decision; you have to either push a button that would wipe out all other life on earth and save mankind only, or push the other button that would wipe out mankind and spare all other life on the planet. In this hypothetical scenario, if one chooses to save mankind then man would be able to persist and thrive without other life existing just fine. What do you choose and why?

This is a strange hypothetical because humans depend on other life to survive. So you'd have to somehow radically alter human nature for us to survive in the absence of all other life.
 

Debater Slayer

Vipassana
Staff member
Premium Member
Where do you place life outside of mankind on this scale? Do you place all other life on this planet above mankind in importance, does it have the same importance to you, or is everything else less important to you than mankind?

I don't tend to think in those terms; I believe all life is important to the ecosystem we live in. I think it would be the height of hubris to say that humanity should be able to wipe out all other life on Earth. We're merely another animal species in a vast ecosystem, and I believe we should respect other life and not encroach on it just to expand our consumerist luxuries.

With your answer in mind I want you to answer another question for me. Let's say you were forced to make a decision; you have to either push a button that would wipe out all other life on earth and save mankind only, or push the other button that would wipe out mankind and spare all other life on the planet. In this hypothetical scenario, if one chooses to save mankind then man would be able to persist and thrive without other life existing just fine. What do you choose and why?

In both scenarios, I would feel utter despair and distress after pushing the button. I'm glad there isn't and will never be such a scenario in reality.

I can't give an answer to the hypothetical because I have none other than the above.
 

We Never Know

No Slack
What about womankind and nonbinary kind?

(yes, I'm going to be that person - I have a major pet peeve about referencing the human species as "mankind" - this ain't the 20th century and prior)
Would human kind be more sufficient. That would umbrella everyone under it.
Even though mankind essentially means all humans.
 
Top