generally said, if you feel that way, and lack evidence, its because you are wrong.
you may have heard of it, its the condition in which a belief you hold is found to be untrue.
The thing is, you haven’t
shown my beliefs to be incorrect, nor my arguments to be invalid. You have persisted in singing the same tune, over and over, and that leads me to believe that in fact
you lack further evidence on which to be certain of your position.
yes and your ‘evidence’ of anthro is --appeal to authority and --appeal to the majority and --affirming the consequent and --verbosity
im sure i could go on, but do you need more specifics?
Some clarification would be appreciated, actually - are you talking about evidence I have presented for anthropomorphism being insufficient to produce all the evidence of animal affectivity, or your use of anthropomorphism as a blanket dismissal of all my evidence?
And I apologise if my verbosity has caused offence; but I freely acknowledge that I am a word nerd.
please then, show me proof of the emotions in animals? because all of it i have seen so far amounts to little more than projection and assumption, of those emotions.
Animals demonstrate outward signs of emotion. They are living, breathing, feeling creatures. They react to both positive and negative stimulation, in ways that haven’t been programmed into their hard drives. They learn to deal with different experiences, and can be trained to respond to abstract stimuli,
because they can feel. Cats purr when they are contented - I’ve never heard a human purr. Dogs wag their tails when they are happy or excited, and they wag them differently when they are defensive - humans don’t even have tails to wag, so we can’t express emotions in the same way.
It may very well be that when my cats crawl into my lap and purr, they are appreciating the warmth rather than me personally. However, their demonstrated reluctance to crawl into the laps of people they have never met before seems like evidence that they prefer to get their warmth from a trusted source! Even if animal emotions are limited to simple perception of pleasant and unpleasant sensation - such perception being fundamental to survival - in this respect they are entitled to be free of unnecessary unpleasantness.
Furthermore, there is research being done into the phenomenon of anthropomorphism, with the aim of finding out just how much of a factor it is in behavioural research, and to what extent it is even possible for humans to understand the natural world with a non-human perspective.
I see your anthropomorphism and raise you anthropocentric arrogance. The truth is that you see no emotion in animals because you are determined not to see it. The trouble with using the accusation of anthropomorphism to dismiss my arguments is that it’s too easy to turn it around and say that the reverse is true of you.
thats the first huge assumption. emotions as humans experience them dont translate into emotions for animals, regardless of chemical similarities.
emotions as animals experience them are in all likelihood very different to how humans experience them. Every human has different emotional experiences as well. We have already covered this. Difference is not evidence that animals don’t experience emotions
at all, which is what you seem to be trying to assert.
and as you seem to want specific logical violations this one is called affirming the consequent.
There we go. This gives me more material to work with. I can acknowlege that one can’t assume that all animals feel emotions just because humans can, or just because their neuronal arrangement is similar. That’s why the supporting evidence of behavioural study is necessary. I apologise if my explanation here isn’t clear - I have never studied logic as such, so I’ve had to do some serious reading up on the subject while posting to this thread. As for arguing from the proposition that exhibited characteristics are the product of biological structures, I’m not simply assuming this is correct. It has been extensively researched, in both humans and other animals, to a standard of proof that puts it at the very least beyond reasonable doubt.
why does the possession of sensors, equal the right to not have those sensors tripped?
a roomba has malfunctions sensors, does it become a moral wrong to step on a roomba, because it has those sensors.
Absolutely not. A roomba, or indeed a Plio or any other machine programmed by humans can only act according to its programming, never through its own volition. They aren’t alive, they don’t have affective consciousness, and it’s only immoral to destroy them in the sense that it’s wrong to deliberately destroy other people’s possessions.
you cant have a social relationship with a machine, meaty or plasticky.
i dont think i really have a social relationsship with the cats, i know it seems like it, but i dont have a social relationship with my roomba either.
it is an illusion called projection.
Well, of course
you can’t have a social relationship with an animal, because you see them as tools for your use, and you are determined to think that they don’t have feelings. I don’t have a social relationship with my computer, even though I spend a lot of time with it. It’s just another tool. I can and do have a social relationship with my dog, which is mutually beneficial. Having him around makes me happy and gives me a good excuse to exercise, and I look after his needs, so that keeps him healthy, and by extension, contented and comfortable. That’s what social relationships are - an extension of symbiosis and an exercise in mutual benefit, whatever form that benefit takes.