Thanks guys, one of the points to ponder I was bringing up was the fact that Man, as a species, is probably the most adaptable single species on the planet. Inuit prove you don't really need vegetation, vegetarians prove you don't really need meat. Many vegetarians don't eat meat for moral reasons while, as I pointed out in an earlier thread, most indigenous peoples recognize and give deeply held gratitude for the sacrifice of life involved in eating flesh.
Each has quite a large spiritual component.
( I've always said that if everyone had to slaughter and prepare their own meat, there'd be a whole lot more vegetarians in the world.)
Anybody who has ever spent any amount of time out in "the real world" recognizes that Man is simply another component in and of this world. About the only reason I think that human life is intrinsically more valuable than an animals life is that humans can dedicate themselves to a purpose. Humans can, through altruism, benefit others by sacrificng themselves, with no thought of personal gain or even desire for thanks. Something which runs completely counter to the most basic of survival instincts and is an almost exclusively human activity. Self-sacrifice is not a Darwinian adaptation. It is a conscious decision, a recognition that there exists in the universe something, (or many things), much greater than oneself, and that dedicating ones energy, or life, toward perpetuating that greatness, that purpose, is a worthy goal.
Each has quite a large spiritual component.
( I've always said that if everyone had to slaughter and prepare their own meat, there'd be a whole lot more vegetarians in the world.)
Anybody who has ever spent any amount of time out in "the real world" recognizes that Man is simply another component in and of this world. About the only reason I think that human life is intrinsically more valuable than an animals life is that humans can dedicate themselves to a purpose. Humans can, through altruism, benefit others by sacrificng themselves, with no thought of personal gain or even desire for thanks. Something which runs completely counter to the most basic of survival instincts and is an almost exclusively human activity. Self-sacrifice is not a Darwinian adaptation. It is a conscious decision, a recognition that there exists in the universe something, (or many things), much greater than oneself, and that dedicating ones energy, or life, toward perpetuating that greatness, that purpose, is a worthy goal.