As we near the end of the semester, if I had to select one fundamental
principle; it is precisely that; fundamental principles. Many authors embrace topics yet negate first
principles. E.g., whenever we are
discussing how to make changes or improvements to an existing system or
infrastructure, we want to examine the nature of the act in question. E.g., in a recent article on CNN entitled, “Skip
the Meat on Earth Day” John Sutter discusses the efficiency of animal
agriculture absent any consideration for the animals. As for this idea of first principles, he
dismissed any such concerns with one sentence; “Animal rights aside.” This is unsatisfactory; grossly deficient.
We cannot be flippant on matters of life and
death. It is the duty of all rational
beings to thoroughly examine first principles in all facets of our day-to-day
lives. In the above example, billions of thinking and
feeling animals are slaughtered every year for our tastes. Human ingenuity seems to have outwitted us. Before we invent and implement self-described,
clever solutions to our current practices - it behooves us to examine necessary
antecedents; i.e., ought we to be killing animals at all? In the above case, we have to ask, (i) ought
we to be negating the lives of animals, and (ii) do we negate our own lives,
limiting our potential in the process?