FEA said:
This thread is about whether or not it is ethically wrong to consume animal products... So, yes, that's what I'm discussing... Whereas you seem to be justifying (what you admit is) unethical behavior by comparing it, in relative terms, to your neighbor?
This wasn't what I meant at all; sorry for being unclear. What I meant is that we seem to be reaching slightly different conclusions because we use different systems to anchor our ethical judgments. Namely, you appeared to be working in terms of the question of how to generate valid ethical rules with which to guide decisions, primarily in terms of categorical judgments (as to whether you're influenced by Kant's work, thus oriented toward the goal of logically valid universalization of said rules, or moreso by others, is as of yet unclear), whereas in that instance, I was using a more utilitarian type argument.
I should note that my ethical system of choice is open and unfinished: I haven't really been happy with any ethical system that I've run into thus far, though I am somewhat satisfied with the vague direction the American Pragmatists go. I should also note that I think that veganism is ethically superior to lacto-ovo vegetarianism, so we disagree on a very minor point.
If ebola wants to continue using relatively inaccessible language
Okay. I guess one challenge is that I actually don't know with a great deal of accuracy or precision what words other people do and do not know. It's also problematic that there is some specific philosophical jargon that also tends to drastically increase efficiency of communication.
Abject said:
You're right, you still haven't clearly explained your 3:1 to 10:1 ratios or whatever they were
I'm honestly running out of ways to explain this. Do you recall my example about growing 20k kCal worth of crops? Did it make sense to you? To revisit it, The whole point is to look at what proportion of calories present within plants used to feed animals makes it to usable muscle and organ mass used as food by humans (yes, this includes hot dogs, etc.). With eggs, this is typically one third (milk is similar), but with adult steer, this is one tenth. Eating plants directly, 100 percent of the plant calories are used for food, so the ratio is 1:1 (for what should be obvious reasons). I should also note that only one tenth or so of the energy falling on wheat is converted into energy stored in starch.
Securing sufficient micronutrients really involves a drastically lower volume of crops compared to those we use primarily as caloric sources (think of the total amount of leafy greens we grow compared to the total amount of corn we grow, for example), and omnivores still need to eat these crops we grow primarily for micronutrients (pretty much any healthy diet involves a lot of non-starchy fruits and veggies). Thus, nutritional superiority has little bearing on energy-efficiency.
i highly doubt they would be of equal needs.
You're entirely correct. The ratio is roughly 3-4:10 for chicken meat. The 10:1 figure was specific to adult steers. I have no idea what it would be for veal.
I'm personally of the belief that most peoples attempts at veganism are pessimal.
Well, I've had good luck, though I get a lot of exercise, so I actually burn through about 800+ kCal / day working out; I use up those carbs and really need them to perform decently.
ebola