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I've read her responses. Given the division among those responding, it seems she really should be clearer in her responses. Everything, contextually, seems to be siding with "why is beastiality bad, because it doesn't make sense to me that it is considered bad".
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I haven't read anything context of, "of course we all consider beastiality bad, but the origins of the taboo are interesting to me. How do you think that originated?" Notice the clarity. She really could have done a better job of wording everything, if she truly was 100% neutral
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To be clear: My metaethical stance is nihilism; my object-ethical stance is something like 'reduce harm.' If it hurts a living creature, it's probably worse than if it doesn't hurt them. Bestiality seems to have a relatively high rate of harm; I do not approve of causing harm.
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I was asking about the origins of the taboo, yes. I wasn't asking about why it seems to hurt the animals... it seems to depend a lot on the animal? And when it does hurt it seems obvious why it hurts (physical damage)? I guess I find that question less interesting.
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I don't know? Like, there's some really good theories, but I'd like to discuss them more. Like, disease is good, but it brings up more questions in me about *other* disease-related taboos, and also frequency of disease required to create that taboo.