However, as I’ve written about before elsewhere, this kind of thinking does lead to the amusing conclusion that cutting off a baby’s limb is more wrong than killing it (because in the former case there’s a full-human who’s directly harmed, which is not true in the latter case).
You say that like it’s an unexpected conclusion. Which is more wrong: cutting off one of a dog’s legs, or euthanizing it? Most people, I suspect, would say the former.
What happens is that we apply different standards to thinking, feeling life forms of limited intelligence based on whether or not the organism happens to be human.
Personally, I would say that neither of those is wrong (per se, anyway), and I don’t think the situations are very analogous. But I certainly agree with your last sentence (both that we apply different standards, and that we shouldn’t).
You say that like it’s an unexpected conclusion. Which is more wrong: cutting off one of a dog’s legs, or euthanizing it? Most people, I suspect, would say the former.
What happens is that we apply different standards to thinking, feeling life forms of limited intelligence based on whether or not the organism happens to be human.
Personally, I would say that neither of those is wrong (per se, anyway), and I don’t think the situations are very analogous. But I certainly agree with your last sentence (both that we apply different standards, and that we shouldn’t).