I think that all this time, human beings have been watched by creatures whose perceptions and understanding have been so far in advance of anything we have been able to accept, because of our vanity, that we would be appalled if we were able to know, would be humiliated. We have been living with them as blundering, blind, callous, cruel murderers and torturers, and they have watched and known us. And this is the reason we refuse to acknowledge the intelligence of the creatures that surround us: the shock to our amour propre would be too much, the judgement we would have to make on ourselves too horrible: it is exactly the same process that can make someone go on and on committing a crime, or a cruelty, knowing it: the stopping and having to see what has been done would be too painful, one cannot face it.
-- Doris Lessing, Memoirs of a Survivor
I don't empathize with the suffering of all sentient beings, and don't think that I should either. There are even some human beings who I don't empathize with; serial killers, for instance.
I empathize with animals on an essentially arbitrary basis, according to what's been taught to me by my culture. It helps if an animal does something "nice" for me, and if an animal does something "mean" like biting me then I'll dislike it. I don't think that this is incorrect for me to do because I don't think there are any moral justifications that...
Another month, another rationality quotes thread. The rules are: