“I think that by the middle of this century people will still be eating meat (though less), and their meat will mostly be produced in factories through synthetic processes, cell cultures, and so on.” PeopleThinkingStillsCultureProcessMiddleCenturyEatingCellsMeatFactoriesSyntheticEating Meat Author:Dale Jamieson
“The idea that we would raise billions of sentient animals, treat them horribly, pollute our waterways with their waste, compromise the effectiveness of our antibiotics so that they grow faster, and then slaughter them with little regard to their suffering so that we can feed off their corpses, will seem to most people unthinkably cruel and barbarous - sort of in the way that we think of medieval punishments, or Europeans today think of the death penalty.” PeopleThinkingWayLittlesIdeasSeemsTodaySufferingGrowsAnimalWasteTreatsRegardRaisesBillionsPunishmentCompromiseFasterPenaltiesDeath PenaltyCorpsesEffectivenessMedievalSlaughterThink Of MeAntibiotics Author:Dale Jamieson
“Increasingly both environmentalists and animal ethicists recognize the enormous destruction caused by animal agriculture.” AnimalDestructionEnormousAgricultureEnvironmentalistAnimal Agriculture Author:Dale Jamieson
“Some philosophers have begun writing sympathetically about predator elimination as a way of reducing animal suffering. From an environmental perspective this is somewhere between naïve and potentially disastrous.” WayWritingSufferingAnimalPerspectiveEnvironmentalPhilosopherReducingPredatorEliminationAnimal Suffering Author:Dale Jamieson
“You can't imagine anything like nature as we know it without predators.” KnowsImaginePredator Author:Dale Jamieson
“I worry that even well-intentioned attempts to "improve nature" (say by reducing suffering) will make things worse even in their own terms.” WellsSufferingTermWorryReducing Author:Dale Jamieson
“Philosophers (and probably most intellectuals) are more interested in pursuing what they see as the logical implications of their theories than they are in paying attention to the shlumpy diversity of defensible values that people actually have, and then trying to figure out how these might be negotiated in the life of an agent or community.” PeopleTryingMightValuesCommunityAttentionFiguresTheoryDiversityPhilosopherAgentsPay AttentionLogicalImplications Author:Dale Jamieson
“Philosophers tend to radically underestimate the distance between abstract principles (such as "reduce suffering") and what it might actually mean for people to act on them.” PeopleMeanMightSufferingPrinciplesDistancePhilosopherAbstractUnderestimate Author:Dale Jamieson
“Philosophers are often actively disinterested in what happens between the cup and the lips (after all, that's "non-ideal theory").” HappensTheoryIdealsLipsPhilosopherCupsDisinterested Author:Dale Jamieson
“A common rhetorical strategy of politicians and others is to frame their opponents' views in the worst possible light, tacitly suggesting that all versions of the view must be committed to some particularly deplorable conclusion. Philosophers are not immune to this way of arguing.” WayLightViewsCommonWorstPoliticianStrategyPhilosopherCommittedArguingVersionsConclusionOpponentsImmuneSuggestingRhetoricalRhetorical Strategies Author:Dale Jamieson