I have difficulties reconciling these two statements. Does not the second statement more or less directly imply that, to a duck, the importance of a duck is always superior to that of a chicken, and vice versa. If ethical behaviour is an innate part of a species survival kit, then it follows that ethics is inherently subjective, at least on a species level. Of course, as humans, we are free to disregard this, if we like to, but I would be fairly cautious about completely throwing away a principle that has been an important part of our species survival this far.Iratus Ranunculus wrote:No. You cannot. Not a qualitative superiority anyway. That would be like a duck claiming to be superior to chickens because of their webbed feet. It is arbitrary. The only way to get at the question is to ask yourself what ethics fundamentally are, and then apply a logical structure to it.
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3) Ethical behavior is a necessary condition for any animal to live in any cooperative social group, and it has evolved multiple times to varying degrees of complexity in every cooperatively social species. Ding ding ding! A brief survey of.. pretty much all of biology shows this one to be true.
Would not taking your following (very interesting) discussion about suffering, to its extremes lead to that humans should docily accept being killed by a developed species (from alpha centauri) with higher capacity of suffering, if they would require our death to alleviate their suffering. I don't think very many people would be happily accepting that.
