Mentioning “non-human animals” in the same sentence and context along with humans and AIs, and “other intelligences” (implying that non-human animals may be usefully referred to as “intelligences”, i.e. that they are similar to humans along the relevant dimensions here, such as intelligence, reasoning capability, etc.) reads like an attempt to smuggle in a claim by means of that implication. Now, I don’t impute ignoble intent to the writers of that declaration; they may well consider the question settled, and so do not consider themselves to be making any unsupported claims. But there’s clearly a claim hidden in that statement, and I’d like to see it made quite explicit, at least, even if you think it’s not worth arguing for.
That is, of course, apart from my belief that animals do not have intrinsic moral value. (To be truthful, I often find myself more annoyed with bad arguments than wrong beliefs or bad deeds.)
I certainly wouldn’t, and here’s why.
Mentioning “non-human animals” in the same sentence and context along with humans and AIs, and “other intelligences” (implying that non-human animals may be usefully referred to as “intelligences”, i.e. that they are similar to humans along the relevant dimensions here, such as intelligence, reasoning capability, etc.) reads like an attempt to smuggle in a claim by means of that implication. Now, I don’t impute ignoble intent to the writers of that declaration; they may well consider the question settled, and so do not consider themselves to be making any unsupported claims. But there’s clearly a claim hidden in that statement, and I’d like to see it made quite explicit, at least, even if you think it’s not worth arguing for.
That is, of course, apart from my belief that animals do not have intrinsic moral value. (To be truthful, I often find myself more annoyed with bad arguments than wrong beliefs or bad deeds.)