Reporting ethical qualms and actually changing your behavior based on your ethical qualm are two different things.
I vaguely remember a study that concluded that philosophers are bad at changing their eating behavior based on their own ethical considerations. Unfortunately I don’t find it at the moment.
Maybe someone could persuade Leiter to run something like the LessWrong survey with his readership?
I vaguely remember a study that concluded that philosophers are bad at changing their eating behavior based on their own ethical considerations. Unfortunately I don’t find it at the moment.
The poll had exactly one question. The LessWrong survey had 106. If Leiter would have made a survey with multiple questions, one of those questions would be the amount of academic philosophy education that the respondend got.
We could focus on those people to answer the question whether academic philosophers have different views on being vegan than the general population.
A survey with a lot of questions is also less likely to be the target of meatpuppet voting.
Reporting ethical qualms and actually changing your behavior based on your ethical qualm are two different things.
I vaguely remember a study that concluded that philosophers are bad at changing their eating behavior based on their own ethical considerations. Unfortunately I don’t find it at the moment.
Maybe someone could persuade Leiter to run something like the LessWrong survey with his readership?
I guess you didn’t even read the link, then.
I didn’t read every word of the article but I skimmed it.
http://leiterreports.typepad.com/blog/2012/10/philosophers-eating-ethics.html seems to be the post that had the poll.
The poll had exactly one question. The LessWrong survey had 106. If Leiter would have made a survey with multiple questions, one of those questions would be the amount of academic philosophy education that the respondend got.
We could focus on those people to answer the question whether academic philosophers have different views on being vegan than the general population.
A survey with a lot of questions is also less likely to be the target of meatpuppet voting.