The bird is probably gong to die anyway. It's probably better just to kill it.
Depends on the injury, actually. A broken wing -- yeah, that bird's not gonna last in the wild. A bite from a cat that misses vital organs and doesn't bleed out, or some scratching? It may well survive that if it can recuperate, clot up, and retain the ability to fly after. Living systems have this weird ability to, y'know, heal from damage inflicted as long as it's not too severe.
Everything's going to die eventually. So are all the people you might ever help. Should you just not help because in the long run everything's doomed to be recycled?
They'll probably just euthanize it anyway. But yes, it can make you feel good if you don't know or think about what'll end up happening.
I take it you're not a wildlife rehabilitator and don't know anyone who is? Because that's not the standard response to injured animals...
I take it you're not a wildlife rehabilitator and don't know anyone who is?
If you must know my cynicism was given to me from my veterinarian sister who spends a surprising amount of her time killing wildlife that well intentioned but naive individuals have brought in to her or to wildlife nuts. At times she even has to bite her tongue and not tell them that if they had left the poor creature alone it probably would have lived but now that they caught it it is going to die!
Because that's not the standard response to injured animals...
Injured animals...
I ended up reading this article about animal suffering by this Christian apologist called William Craig. Forgive the source, please.
He continues the argument here.
How decent do you think this argument is? I don't know where to look to evaluate the core claim, as I know very little neuroscience myself. I'm quite concerned about animal suffering, and choose to be vegetarian largely on the basis of that concern. How much should my decision on that be affected by this argument?
EDIT: David_Gerard wins by doing the basic Google search that I neglected. It seems that the argument is flawed. Particularly, animals apart from primates have pre-frontal cortexes.