While most people have super flimsy defenses of meat-eating, that doesn’t mean everyone does. Some people simply think it’s quite unlikely that non-human animals are sentient (besides primates, maybe). For example, IIRC Eliezer Yudkowsky and Rob Bensinger’s guess is that consciousness is highly contingent on factors such as general intelligence and sociality, or something like that.
I think the “5% chance is still too much” argument is convincing, but it begs similar questions such as “Are you really so confident that fetuses aren’t sentient? How could you be so sure?”
While most people have super flimsy defenses of meat-eating, that doesn’t mean everyone does. Some people simply think it’s quite unlikely that non-human animals are sentient (besides primates, maybe). For example, IIRC Eliezer Yudkowsky and Rob Bensinger’s guess is that consciousness is highly contingent on factors such as general intelligence and sociality, or something like that.
I think the “5% chance is still too much” argument is convincing, but it begs similar questions such as “Are you really so confident that fetuses aren’t sentient? How could you be so sure?”
Eliezer’s argument is the primary one I’m thinking of as an obvious rationalization.
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/KFbGbTEtHiJnXw5sk/i-really-don-t-understand-eliezer-yudkowsky-s-position-on
https://benthams.substack.com/p/against-yudkowskys-implausible-position
I’m not confident about fetuses either, hence why I generally oppose abortion after the fetus has started developing a brain.