Lumpenproletariat
Veteran Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2014
- Messages
- 2,599
- Basic Beliefs
- ---- "Just the facts, ma'am, just the facts."
What criterion makes the higher animals superior to the lower?
The dog is smarter.
How about an ugly manatee vs. a colorful butterfly. Doesn't the manatee have more intrinsic value than the butterfly? It's not about the attractiveness vs. the ugliness. The beauty is something of value to the human observer, and so for beauty vs. ugliness it's the human pleasure which has the value, not the beautiful or ugly object being observed.
The objective criterion is mostly the ability to think, or to learn, or to make judgments or predictions and to wonder what's happening, etc.
Those animals which have a greater sensitivity to the world, ability to think about things, etc., are superior to the ones which have less of this.
(Although those manatees need to learn better how to dodge those motorboat propellers.)
If it's an objective standard, then they should not be too similar to determine which is the higher life form.I don't know. Superior by what objective criteria?A dog and a lizard. Or a dog and a centipede. Do you have a problem recognizing that the dog is superior?
The dog is smarter.
You wouldn't give priority to saving the dog over the lizard?
The question was whether or not it is meaningful to suggest an objective standard can determine higher and lower life forms. You're asking my subjective opinion on cute&furry vs. scaly&ugly.
How about an ugly manatee vs. a colorful butterfly. Doesn't the manatee have more intrinsic value than the butterfly? It's not about the attractiveness vs. the ugliness. The beauty is something of value to the human observer, and so for beauty vs. ugliness it's the human pleasure which has the value, not the beautiful or ugly object being observed.
I have to conclude that you do not have any idea for an objective scale to determine higher life forms.
The objective criterion is mostly the ability to think, or to learn, or to make judgments or predictions and to wonder what's happening, etc.
Those animals which have a greater sensitivity to the world, ability to think about things, etc., are superior to the ones which have less of this.
(Although those manatees need to learn better how to dodge those motorboat propellers.)