• ganymede
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        That is good information that it has been ratified.

        To put it in ethical terms, it may be good to give a very wide berth on where the definition of sentience might be. (ignoring or including that the capability for suffering may not be identical to sentience. but agreed its a good starting point to establish a bounds.)

        To put it in intellectual or scientific terms, no numeric value can be correctly assigned to a real world quantity without an associated error. The maximum radius of that error is roughly what I would ascribe to the “wide berth” mentioned above.

        The limits of our perception meaning there’s a chance we may be wrong, and in this context i’d rather be wrong for the right reasons - so to speak.

        There’s alot of discussion around humans being more valuable because of our elevated perception and sentience. I would put it the other way: with the increased sentience comes a duty of care, that is where our responsibilities to other species comes from imo.

        I know I didn’t say anything to disagree with either of you, just continuing the enjoyable discussion.

          • ganymede
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            2 years ago

            sorry late reply, got sucked into work and thing. finally back.

            yeah i agree with you here. all i meant re. responsibility was along the lines of, when people ask “is it ok to mistreat animals for <whatever> gain?”.

            my response would be, no, not only is it wrong because its plain wrong, but also because we have responsibility.