Well try not to be too harsh, there's got to be a certain amount of bias since I've written it. And frequently such 'unfounded' beliefs are based religiously; those sorts of things are... sensitive, to say the least.
I'm just saying that in order to concieve of the second option you need to first decide that human beings are so unbelievably special that they get their own seperate category unique from all other life-forms on this planet.
The level of arrogance required to reach this view is actually beyond my comprehension.
Of course they do, but non-human animals still have psychology to varying degrees. There is actual research into animal psychopathology; it's not just some made-up crock. Obviously, it all depends on the individual animal you're studying, but the animals we eat usually aren't even the particularly "dumb" ones anyhow. At least none of the ones we've been mentioning.
Most animals aren't anything like as dumb as we like to think; intelligence is one of those sliding scale things, rather than a switch.
You completely missed the point. My point was that whether or not it's going to die at some point within the next year or two is irrelevant to whether or not it's okay to mistreat it. It's just dodging the question of how much ethical weight should be given to the creature in the first place.
If the ability for pigs to suffer and their status as beings with complex psychology makes it inhumane to treat them poorly, then this is the case regardless of whether or not they're going to be eaten for food, for (some of) the same reasons that it's the case for a person.
I was responding to your claim that if it's alright to treat a pig poorly because it's going to die in a year's time, then it's alright to treat a person poorly because he's going to die in a year's time; this is ovbiously rediculous, as one is a pig, and the other is a person. Treating both entities the same is ludicrous.
Agreed. Saying we're the "alpha species" is kind of silly anyway; we GUARANTEE the survival of other species by simple virtue of the fact that we need them to survive. It's not as if we can just decide "screw it all, every species besides us goes" because 1) we don't even have the current capacity to do that, and 2) we'd die in short order. This is to say nothing of the kind of symbiosis that goes on inside us with, say, bacteria.
It's extremely silly; the current alpha species would almost definitely be the Common Cold, which has us thougherly beat and reminds us of this fact every year. Cockroaches, rats and other parasites and vermin that have adapted well to Humans would come in second, Humans only score third on the graph, unfortunately.
Of course we're working to change that, and given enough time it's reasonable to think we should be able to get up to the second-best rung, and might even be able to claim the top, but it's going to take awhile yet.
Finally; simply because we need another species to survive, does not mean we suddenly have some sort of duty to rear it in a bed of silk cushions. If we need Species X for a given purpose, we should be treating it exactly as well as is required in order for it to meet that purpose with the maximum efficiency and effectiveness. Expending additional resources above and beyond that marker is, quite simply, a waste.