PyramidHead
Contributor
Eating meat is not the same thing as saying harming conscious beings is not a problem! So no, that's not the argument I'm making!
Well then, what the hell were you talking about? How is my willingness to kill a cow before I eat it (I assume it's the killing it myself which you have an issue with as opposed to buying it pre-killed at a store that you have a problem with) somehow equivalent to not caring about people in a burning building? You are aware of the context of the statement, so I assume you weren't just taking the one sentence out of context from the paragraph it was in and didn't ignore the next sentence in order to deliberately misunderstand it. Please flesh out the thought process of how you built your argument here.
Your statement made it appear as if your primary problem with e.g. people trapped in a burning building is that human life was at risk, not that there was suffering happening, because harm befalling conscious beings is not a problem by itself. It's only a problem when those conscious beings have a particular genetic composition that classifies them as human. A burning building full of aliens, elephants, or neanderthals would require no action on the part of able-bodied bystanders, from what I understand of your reasoning. If I am wrong, tell me how.
Arbitrary isn't a synoym of random. I think viability is better for all the reasons I've talked about.
I don't remember you giving any reasons, just examples where you repeat your contention that we are obligated to treat all viable human life equally. Why are we obligated to do so, and why should that obligation be taken more seriously than the obligation not to cause suffering?