If the animals are already dead and available, and weren't harmed for the purposes of dissection, I don't think there's an issue.
But... they're already dead because somebody killed 'em. Unlike human subjects, which you can usually assume died of natural causes or misadventure.
Well I bolded the part of my post that I think is relevant. If they're not being killed (and raised) just so we can dissect them, I don't think there's a problem with dissection.
Fair enough; but short of limiting the sources of dissection animals to carrion, virtually no animal that is not a cat or dog would fail to raise that issue.
And cats and dogs raise their own issues anyway. They're not killed specifically for dissection, but killed because a species whose members average about one twentieth the size of a human
obviously should not be allowed to approach a tenth the size of the human population.
Well to give you an idea of what type of Hindu I am, one of my favorite meals is a cheeseburger.
I do hold animal life as precious, don't get me wrong. And I see it as a failing on my part that I'm not a vegetarian, though I personally don't see any restriction of animal consumption as a necessary part of being a Hindu. My issues with eating meat are non-religious.
Fair enough. My understanding was that it is not enjoined (although iirc orthodox Vaishnavites might be, or maybe just brahmins--I tried to look it up real quick and got a lot of contradictory information) but pretty universally considered "worse" than vegetarianism, albeit for some reasons which hold up to scrutiny and others which do not.
For what it's worth, lacto-vegetarianism isn't that hard. Veganism, that's hard (and in the present economy, almost certain to technically fail). That's why they reward you with superpowers if you go full vegan.
Examining the dead body of an animal certainly raises no issues with my faith. I consider it science. My dad is a surgeon and deals with people's insides for a living, so that might explain some of it?
Well, there's certainly nothing wrong the examination part. It's the method of death which is of concern.
YellowSubmarine said:
Your moral scale doesn't apply equally on all animals. Some animals might suffer if they are forced to live in a closed space, others do not, some animals might love human interaction and training, others might find it painful and only do it because they feel forced. Some animals don't feel pain, so torturing them or killing them doesn't matter. You can't really ask the animals what they prefer, how they feel, and you can't always deduce it, so the scale is different for every animal, and you don't know which is which.
Indeed, as I noted.
So while I support the idea to improve the situation, especially when it comes to killing, I also think that the moral scale for these improvements should be based on more knowledge, and should not be rushed.
It's probably better to err on the side of caution. This is how we approach everything else, for example the standards of proof used in American jurisprudence to allocate guilt or liability.
scotpens said:
The meaning of that is unclear. Do you mean “better than life in the wild”?
I wanted to make a Red Dwarf reference. But yes.
“Slaves” is a loaded word just dripping with anthropomorphism. What about dairy cows and goats? Or sheep raised for wool? Or work animals and beasts of burden? Are they “slaves” as well? How do you feel about horse racing?
I could use the term "chattel property whose actions are manipulated to benefit the owner."
Anthropomorphism isn't unhealthy in small doses. For one, it's not necessarily inaccurate--animals display a wide variety of humanlike behaviors; for two, the emotional aspect of the animal rights argument cannot be neglected, since even the most enlightened self-interest would be loath to recognize a rights regime, only the dangerous aspects of animal exploitation, such as the ecological problems and economic externalities factory farming poses.