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Chapter Eleven: Animal Rights and Environmental Ethics Review

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Chapter Eleven: Animal Rights and Environmental Ethics Review Applying Ethics: A Text with Readings (10th ed.) Julie C. Van Camp, Jeffrey Olen, Vincent Barry – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Eleven: Animal Rights and Environmental Ethics Review


1
Chapter ElevenAnimal Rights andEnvironmental
Ethics Review
  • Applying Ethics A Text with Readings (10th ed.)
  • Julie C. Van Camp, Jeffrey Olen, Vincent Barry
  • Cengage Learning/Wadsworth

2
What are traditional approaches to animal rights?
  • Judeo-Christian tradition
  • Animals put here for our purposes
  • Some exceptions St. Francis of Assisi
  • Philosophical tradition (Descartes, Kant)
  • Traditionally excludes nonhuman animals from
    rights of persons
  • We have no moral obligations to animals
  • Social contract theory
  • Agreement among persons
  • Excludes rights for animals

3
What are contemporary approaches to animal
rights?
  • What is the utilitarian approach? (Singer)
  • As animals feel pleasure and pain, just as human
    animals, we have moral obligations to them
  • We should maximize pleasure and minimize pain for
    all animals, both human and nonhuman
  • What is the Kantian approach? (Regan)
  • Rejects utilitarianism
  • Nonhuman animals should be treated with respect
    and dignity, just like human animals

4
What is speciecism?
  • What is Speciesism?
  • a prejudice or attitude of bias toward interests
    of ones own species and against those of other
    species
  • What is the conventional view?
  • morality is dependent on persons and social
    contract among them
  • What is criticism of the conventional view?
  • all animals have inherent value, even if they are
    not moral agents

5
What are major environmental problems today?
  • Ozone depletion
  • Global warming
  • Acid rain
  • Trash
  • Extinction of species

6
What is anthropocentrism?
  • Approaching all environmental issues solely in
    terms of how they impact persons
  • Human actions are right (or wrong) by
  • Consequences to human well-being (utilitarian)
  • Consistent with norms protecting human rights
    (Kantian)
  • Responsibilities with regard to natural
    ecosystems, but only as they further realization
    of human values and/or human rights
  • No obligation to promote or protect good of
    nonhuman living things

7
What is the difference between holistic and
individualistic environmental ethics?
  • Holistic (Leopold) The good of the biotic
    community as a whole is the morally fundamental
    good
  • Individualistic (Taylor) The good of the
    individuals in the biotic community is the
    morally fundamental good (including both humans
    and nonhuman life)

8
All Animals are Equal . . . Or why Supporters of
Liberation for Blacks and women should Support
Animal Liberation Too Peter Singer
  • Why is speciesism wrong?
  • for the same reasons sexism and racism are wrong
  • What is the principle of equal consideration?
  • the pain that nonhuman animals feel is of equal
    moral importance to the pain that humans feel
  • What does utilitarianism show?
  • shows that we owe moral obligations to nonhuman
    animals

9
The Case for Animal RightsTom Regan
  • Why does he reject utilitarianism for animal
    rights?
  • How does he support rights for nonhuman animals?
  • Using Kantian respect for nonhuman animals

10
Do Animals Have Rights?Carl Cohen
  • How does he argue that animals cannot possess
    rights?
  • Only humans are moral agents with rights
  • Challenges Regans Kantian analysis attributing
    rights to animals
  • Is the use of animals in medical research
    justifiable?
  • What obligations do we have to animals, even
    though animals do not have rights?

11
The Ethics of Respect for NaturePaul W. Taylor
  • What is his approach to environmental ethics?
  • Individualist (not holistic)
  • What is the principal concern of individualists?
  • Individual organisms, not biotic community as a
    whole
  • What is his life-centered system?
  • Kant-like respect for all of nature
  • All living things have inherent worth
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