• Wickramasinghe may have been right.

    From RonO@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 20 09:45:08 2024
    We can hark back to the Arkansas creation science federal court case. It
    wasn't necessary, but when Wichramasinghe was testifying in support of
    the creationist legislation he was made to look foolish by making him
    admit to some of his stranger beliefs. One joke line was his belief
    that insects were smarter than we thought, and they were clever enough
    not to let us know it.

    Some researchers are trying to establish a new concept of consciousness.
    It would allow a lot of animals to be sentient including insects.

    We know that bees have a language, and other insects can communicate via phermones. Attenborough's nature series have shown fish using tools,
    and octopus collaborating with fish and sea snakes collaborating with
    fish to hunt.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/science/science-news/animal-consciousness-scientists-push-new-paradigm-rcna148213

    https://sites.google.com/nyu.edu/nydeclaration/declaration

    Looks like the way they catch crabs on Deadliest Catch will have to
    change. We might be reduced to eating yeast and bacterial cakes until
    they wake up to the fact that single celled organisms also sense and
    react to their environment.

    It should be noted by animal advocates that pretty much all of these
    "sentient" animals kill each other for food. Ants even take slaves. Is
    it ethical to condemn the dominant species just because they are more
    efficient at harvesting the others?

    QUOTE:
    Third, when there is a realistic possibility of conscious experience in
    an animal, it is irresponsible to ignore that possibility in decisions affecting that animal. We should consider welfare risks and use the
    evidence to inform our responses to these risks.
    END QUOTE:

    What they should likely be working on is why using these animals has to
    be restricted, and why welfare risks should be considered if you are not utilizing more than you need. Why should welfare take precedence over efficiency in human existence? It is a double standard that they can't
    apply to all the other species that they claim are sentient. We are
    just another lifeform on this planet. Lynx do not have to worry about
    the stress they put on the rabbits.

    I personally believe that we should treat all lifeforms as humanely as possible, and that we should do everything that we can to ensure that
    other species have their fair chance at surviving in nature, but I know
    that I can't place those same values on all the other species on this
    planet. They are talking about killing wolves in order to help the
    caribou population recover. The first Yellowstone pack likely died out
    due to inbreeding. The wolf population shouldn't be reduced any further
    than it already has been reduced. They have already been decimated.
    They need all the genetic diversity that they have left. They want to
    kill hundreds of thousands of barred owls in the North West just because
    they are out competing the local spotted owls. What seems to be stupid
    about the owls is that both spotted and barred are likely reestablishing themselves in the area after the last cold period. They are both coming
    from the south where they survived during the last ice age. One from
    the east and one from the west. The spotted owls got there first
    because the barred owls had to wait for the northern Canadian forests to reestablish after being covered by a mile of ice. Now the barred owls
    are out competing their spotted cousins. The barred owls are probably
    going to need the hundreds of thousands that they want to kill in order
    to preserve the genetic diversity that they will need to survive the
    next ice age when their current territory will be wiped out and buried
    under ice, they will be beaten back, and they will have to compete with
    their relatives that never left the south.

    Ron Okimoto

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Arkalen@21:1/5 to RonO on Sat Apr 20 20:33:04 2024
    On 20/04/2024 16:45, RonO wrote:
    We can hark back to the Arkansas creation science federal court case. It wasn't necessary, but when Wichramasinghe was testifying in support of
    the creationist legislation he was made to look foolish by making him
    admit to some of his stranger beliefs.  One joke line was his belief
    that insects were smarter than we thought, and they were clever enough
    not to let us know it.

    Some researchers are trying to establish a new concept of consciousness.
     It would allow a lot of animals to be sentient including insects.

    We know that bees have a language, and other insects can communicate via phermones.  Attenborough's nature series have shown fish using tools,
    and octopus collaborating with fish and sea snakes collaborating with
    fish to hunt.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/science/science-news/animal-consciousness-scientists-push-new-paradigm-rcna148213


    https://sites.google.com/nyu.edu/nydeclaration/declaration

    Looks like the way they catch crabs on Deadliest Catch will have to
    change.  We might be reduced to eating yeast and bacterial cakes until
    they wake up to the fact that single celled organisms also sense and
    react to their environment.

    It should be noted by animal advocates that pretty much all of these "sentient" animals kill each other for food.  Ants even take slaves.  Is
    it ethical to condemn the dominant species just because they are more efficient at harvesting the others?

    QUOTE:
    Third, when there is a realistic possibility of conscious experience in
    an animal, it is irresponsible to ignore that possibility in decisions affecting that animal. We should consider welfare risks and use the
    evidence to inform our responses to these risks.
    END QUOTE:

    What they should likely be working on is why using these animals has to
    be restricted, and why welfare risks should be considered if you are not utilizing more than you need.  Why should welfare take precedence over efficiency in human existence?  It is a double standard that they can't apply to all the other species that they claim are sentient.  We are
    just another lifeform on this planet.  Lynx do not have to worry about
    the stress they put on the rabbits.

    I personally believe that we should treat all lifeforms as humanely as possible, and that we should do everything that we can to ensure that
    other species have their fair chance at surviving in nature, but I know
    that I can't place those same values on all the other species on this planet.  They are talking about killing wolves in order to help the
    caribou population recover.  The first Yellowstone pack likely died out
    due to inbreeding.  The wolf population shouldn't be reduced any further than it already has been reduced.  They have already been decimated.
    They need all the genetic diversity that they have left.  They want to
    kill hundreds of thousands of barred owls in the North West just because
    they are out competing the local spotted owls.  What seems to be stupid about the owls is that both spotted and barred are likely reestablishing themselves in the area after the last cold period.  They are both coming from the south where they survived during the last ice age.  One from
    the east and one from the west.  The spotted owls got there first
    because the barred owls had to wait for the northern Canadian forests to reestablish after being covered by a mile of ice.  Now the barred owls
    are out competing their spotted cousins.  The barred owls are probably
    going to need the hundreds of thousands that they want to kill in order
    to preserve the genetic diversity that they will need to survive the
    next ice age when their current territory will be wiped out and buried
    under ice, they will be beaten back, and they will have to compete with
    their relatives that never left the south.

    Ron Okimoto


    That's all food for thought (if nothing else lol), but tbh I think
    there's an objection to all these "everything is conscious/sentient"
    ideas that I don't see brought up a lot, which is: our brain does an
    insane amount of processing that *we're* not conscious of. For example: blindsight. There are different pathways by which visual stimulus is
    processed and it's possible for us to have no conscious awareness of
    vision because one specific pathway doesn't work - but to still perceive
    and react to visual stimulus in a limited way via the other pathway,
    *with no conscious awareness that this is what we're doing*. Say an
    animal were perceiving and reacting to visual information along the same pathway, with the exact level of conscious awareness that a person with blindsight does: we'd observe their behavior and say they see, but does
    that entail they're *conscious* of seeing? For the human with blindsight
    after all we know it doesn't.

    Same with sleepwalking, and all other examples of our brains pulling off complex behavior and even reasoning by some definition or other without conscious correlates.

    Even within consciousness to be honest I feel there's conscious and
    conscious. For example say I'm in an accident - everything happens so
    fast I can't even think, I just act. After it's over I remember the
    events, I reflect on them and on how fast it all happened I couldn't
    even think and such. Was I conscious in that moment? I think it would be
    hard to argue I wasn't; by almost any definition (wakefulness, presence
    of qualia, etc) I was. But if I imagine an existence that's *purely* in
    that state, where the later moment of reflection *never comes*... I find
    I'm pretty ambivalent calling that "consciousness". It's a state I'm
    happy to give moral valence to because obviously pain, fear,
    exhilaration etc are possible in it, and if it's a state that beings we
    care about like young human children are in then I don't want to reason
    myself into not giving moral valence to young human children. But
    still... if we go by my experience of consciousness, if that was the
    only conscious experience I ever had wouldn't consider myself fully
    conscious. (setting aside of course that it's a state I'd never even be
    able to ask that question in, let alone formulate an opinion on it).

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