It's quite simple.
If one accords "personhood" status to something, logic demands that all "persons" deserve and need to be treated equally - not just under the law but morally. If they are not, then it is unacceptable discrimination which undermines the very efficacy of being a person with protected rights - including the right to life - in the first place.
So if one recognises plants as "people" but is in favour of eating them then that is morally reprehensible. Under that understanding, it should be OK to eat humans since there is no distinction or shouldn't be between the rights of persons.
If you do believe it's wrong to eat human persons but OK to eat plant persons then you are discriminating between persons and denying some persons rights while giving other persons more rights.
"Personhood" entails an equality of moral (and hence legal) status between beings. So one cannot recognise one person as having a "right" that another is denied.
Either you believe it's wrong to eat people or you don't.
If one accords "personhood" status to something, logic demands that all "persons" deserve and need to be treated equally - not just under the law but morally. If they are not, then it is unacceptable discrimination which undermines the very efficacy of being a person with protected rights - including the right to life - in the first place.
So if one recognises plants as "people" but is in favour of eating them then that is morally reprehensible. Under that understanding, it should be OK to eat humans since there is no distinction or shouldn't be between the rights of persons.
If you do believe it's wrong to eat human persons but OK to eat plant persons then you are discriminating between persons and denying some persons rights while giving other persons more rights.
"Personhood" entails an equality of moral (and hence legal) status between beings. So one cannot recognise one person as having a "right" that another is denied.
Either you believe it's wrong to eat people or you don't.
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