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CPHL406 Contemporary Moral Issues II

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Title: CPHL406 Contemporary Moral Issues II


1
CPHL406Contemporary Moral Issues II
  • Vegetarianism

2
  • We can conceptually distinguish between at least
    three vegetarian positions
  • Compassionate Vegetarianism The view that we
    ought to refrain from eating animals due to the
    harm it causes animals.

3
  • Dietary Vegetarianism The view that we ought to
    refrain from eating animals due to its harm to
    human health.
  • It is now well-established that humans can live
    quite healthily on a vegetarian (or even vegan)
    diet. Indeed multiple studies have found that
    vegetarians tend to be healthier than meat
    eaters benefits included lower rates of coronary
    heart disease, type II diabetes, hypertension and
    several forms of cancer.
  • For example, The Oxford Vegetarian Study, a
    12-year study of 6000 vegetarians and 5000
    meat-eaters, found a 28 lower incidence of
    coronary heart disease mortality among
    vegetarians than among matched omnivores.

4
  • Environmental Vegetarianism The view that we
    ought to refrain from eating animals due to its
    harm to the environment.
  • In the U.S., more than half of all water consumed
    is used for raising animals for food. It takes
    2500 gallons of water to produce a pound of meat,
    but only 25 gallons to produce a pound of wheat.
  • The meat industry is the greatest polluter of
    U.S. waters, producing nearly 90 000 pounds of
    excrement every second
  • The worlds cattle consume food equivalent to the
    caloric intake that would feed nine billion
    people.

5
Background facts
  • We are directly concerned with position (i), but
    the three positions are closely connected.
  • For example, compassionate vegetarians often
    support their view by appealing to the fact that
    humans at least do not require meat to be
    healthy thus, given the suffering that meat
    consumption causes to animals, it is immoral.
  • And many vegetarians appeal to all three
    positions in making their case.

6
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A1 Humans are naturally meat eaters. We have
    evolved to eat meat, and we naturally take
    pleasure in eating meat. Thus it is morally
    permissible to eat meat.

7
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • Objections
  • O1A1 First, if the claim Humans are naturally
    meat eaters is supposed to mean that humans
    are biologically unsuited to a purely
    vegetarian diet, then it is surely false. It is
    probably true that historically we have largely
    been an omnivorous species, and that
    biologically we are quite capable of consuming
    meat but it is also true that we can survive
    quite healthfully on a vegetarian diet.

8
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A1 The mere fact that we are able to do X and
    / or enjoy doing X does not make doing X morally
    acceptable.
  • We have many natural inclinations - such as
    those to selfishness, violence and sexual
    promiscuity - that we are often morally
    obliged to suppress. Meat eating may or may not
    be one of those suppression-worthy inclinations,
    but we cant simply assume that since it is
    natural it need not be suppressed.

9
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A2 Eating meat is part of the Circle of Life,
    the cycle of life and death that pervades the
    natural world.

10
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O1A2 The Circle of Life in the broad sense
    - the interaction of life forms with their
    environment and each other, and their coming
    into and out of existence - is certainly a
    wonderful, mysterious, valuable thing worth
    participating in. But
  • (i) causing animals to suffer and die
    seems a lousy way of maintaining a
    connection with them and
  • (ii) we are part of the life cycle (in the
    broad sense) whether we want to be or not,
    whether we eat animals or not.

11
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A2 The Circle of Life in a narrower sense
    seems to mean something like predation. In
    this sense it is not clearly in itself a good
    thing. In fact it seems prima facie to be a
    very bad thing, one that we ought to avoid if
    possible. Predation is certainly common
    throughout the natural world, but this does not
    entail that it is morally acceptable for humans
    to participate in it when they have the choice
    not to.

12
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A3 Millions of people (e.g. farmers,
    slaughterhouse workers) depend for their
    livelihood on the meat industry.
  • O1A3 That a persons sole source of income is
    from activity X is clearly not sufficient reason
    for us to conclude that activity X is morally
    acceptable. Example slave trade

13
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A3 It is not clear that anyone depends, in a
    deep sense, on the meat industry for their
    livelihood
  • First of all, in large industrialized societies
    it is rarely if ever the case that an individual
    has only one means available to him of generating
    income.
  • Second, a societal switch to vegetarianism (if it
    were to occur) would involve a gradual loss of
    meat industry jobs, probably offset by gains in
    related industries (e.g. the processed soy
    industry).

14
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A4 We have natural dominion over all other
    animals.

15
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O1A4 If this claim is simply an appeal to the
    authority of the Bible, then it is weak in the
    ways that most such claims are
  • (i) it is subject to intra-religious conflict
    over interpretation (e.g., domination or
    stewardship?)
  • (ii)it is absolutely irrelevant for those who
    do not already subscribe to the
    Judeo- Christian tradition and
  • (iii) It seems to involve selective reading of
    the Bible, since the Bible commands us to do
    many things that Jews and Christians today
    ignore and would find morally abhorrent.

16
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A4 It is probably true that we are the most
    powerful species on the planet, but might does
    not make right we are able to use animals for
    our own ends, but that does not show that it is
    morally acceptable to do so.
  • Analogy Imagine a powerful alien species,
    whose religion gives them dominion over all
    the species of the universe, who raise humans
    for meat. Would that be right?

17
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A5 The life of an animal on a farm is better
    than it would be in nature so we do not make
    it worse off than it would otherwise be by
    raising it and killing it for food.
  • O1A5 If were talking about animals on factory
    farms, it is highly unlikely that their life is
    better than animal life in the wild.

18
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A5 The farm animals in question wouldnt even
    exist if we didnt want them for food nor does
    vegetarianism demand that they ought to be
    released into the wild. The real issue is
    whether we are permitted to bring them into
    existence in the first place.
  • Thus the choice isnt between a wild existence
    and domesticated one it is between existence
    and non- existence, or perhaps between varying
    qualitative levels of domesticated existence.
  • Well postpone discussion of O2A5 to our
    critical analysis of Peter Singers position.

19
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • A6 There is too much human suffering in the
    world to waste our time and energy worrying
    about animal rights.
  • O1A6 To end the suffering of farm animals we do
    not need to do anything we simply need stop
    doing something, namely, eating meat.

20
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O2A6 Vegetarianism is not an alternative to
    caring about humans. An increased concern for
    animals is a natural expression of ones
    increasing sensitivity to suffering in all
    forms, part of a pattern of moral development
    whose end point is full compassion for all
    sentient beings.

21
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • O3A6 Increased vegetarianism helps people
    directly by its positive effects on the
    environment, human health, and the global
    distribution of wealth.

22
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • Isn't man an amazing animal? He kills wildlife
    by the millions in order to protect his domestic
    animals and their feed. Then he kills domestic
    animals by the billions and eats them. This in
    turn kills man by the millions, because eating
    all those animals leads to degenerative --
    and fatal -- health conditions like heart
    disease, kidney disease, and cancer. So then man
    tortures and kills millions more animals to look
    for cures for these diseases. Elsewhere,
    millions of other human beings are being killed
    by hunger and malnutrition because food they
    could eat is being used to fatten domestic
    animals.
  • Meanwhile, some people are dying of sad
    laughter at the absurdity of man, who kills so
    easily and so violently, and once a year sends
    out cards praying for "Peace on Earth."
  • - C. David Coats

23
Common Arguments in Defense of Eating Meat
  • "As long as Man continues to be the ruthless
    destroyer of lower living beings he will never
    know health or peace. For as long as men
    massacre animals, they will kill each other.
    Indeed, he who sows the seed of murder and pain
    cannot reap joy and love."
  • - Pythagoras

24
Kant, Our Duties to Animals
  • Kants view on animals is part of a long Western
    tradition that excludes animals from the realm of
    moral concern
  • Western philosophy has often tied the moral worth
    of a being to its rational capacities, and by
    that measure, animals have been thought to fall
    short.
  • Aristotle, in ancient Greece, and Descartes, in
    the 17th century, believed that moral worth is
    linked to the power of thought, expressed in
    language, and that animals, without linguistic
    ability, are therefore without intrinsic moral
    worth.
  • For Descartes, animals are mere biological
    machines without any sort of consciousness

25
Kant, Our Duties to Animals
  • According to Kant, we have only indirect duties
    to animals our treatment of animals is morally
    relevant only insofar as it affects our treatment
    of people

26
Kant, Our Duties to Animals
  • Remember Kants 2nd Categorical Imperative Never
    treat a person as a mere means to an end.
  • People are rational, autonomous beings and
    therefore of intrinsic worth, according to Kant.
  • They are not mere things to be used, but
    independent centres of value .
  • Since animals are not self-conscious (Kant says)
    it is morally permissible to treat them simply as
    means to an end. They are, in a sense, mere
    things.

27
Kant, Our Duties to Animals
  • But Kant also argues that animals have
    analogies to human nature for example, a dog
    can serve its master long and faithfully.
  • For this reason our interaction with animals is
    good training ground for our interaction with
    humans for example, by rewarding the dogs
    loyalty with kindness, we develop a general
    capacity for kindness that we then express in our
    dealings with people.
  • Hogarths Four Stages of Cruelty, to which
    Kant refers in the reading, can be seen here
  • http//bugpowder.com/andy/e.hogarth-cruelty.html

28
Kant, Our Duties to Animals
  • A couple of potential problems for the Kantian
    view
  • If animals are indeed analogous to humans in what
    seem to be morally relevant features (e.g. their
    love of their young their loyalty their
    capacity for suffering), why do we not have any
    direct duties towards them?
  • 2. Is our treatment of animals really as
    influential on our treatment of humans as Kant
    argues? Surely there are many slaughterhouse
    workers, vivisectionists, deer hunters, and fans
    of bull fighting who are compassionate and
    respectful in their dealings with humans.

29
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Anti-vivisection societies were formed in England
    and the U.S. in the at the end of the 19th
    century. But the animal welfare and rights
    movements more generally are usually thought to
    have gained widespread prominence in the 1970s.
  • One important event in the recent rise to
    prominence of the movement was the publication,
    in 1975, of Peter Singers book Animal
    Liberation, sometimes referred to as the bible of
    the animals rights movement.

30
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Singers position is in conscious opposition to
    that Aristotelian-Kantian Western philosophical
    tradition of identifying rationality to be the
    hallmark of moral worth.
  • He is also consciously opposed to any claim,
    theologically grounded or otherwise, that makes
    membership in the human species a necessary
    condition of moral worth. He is thus opposed to
    speciesism, which, he claims, is just as
    arbitrary and unethical as sexism or racism.

31
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • For Singer, if a being is conscious in a way that
    makes it capable of feeling pleasure and pain, of
    suffering and enjoying, then we ought to take
    that beings interests into consideration when we
    are determining how we ought to act with regard
    to it.
  • With this principle Singer follows Bentham, the
    founding father of utilitarianism, who famously
    proclaimed
  • The question is not, Can they reason? nor,
    Can they talk? but rather, Can they suffer?

32
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Singer elaborates on Benthams dictum as follows
  • If a being suffers there can be no moral
    justification for refusing to take that suffering
    into consideration. No matter what the nature of
    the being, the principle of equality requires
    that its suffering be counted equally with like
    suffering - insofar as rough comparisons can be
    made - of any other being. If a being is not
    capable of suffering, or of experiencing
    enjoyment or happiness, there is nothing to be
    taken into account. So the limit of sentienceis
    the only defensible boundary of concern for the
    interests of others. To mark this boundary by
    some other characteristic like intelligence or
    rationality would be to mark it in an arbitrary
    manner. Animal Liberation, 1975

33
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Singers argument is clearly utilitarian.
  • In deciding what we ought to do, we must
    consider the interests of all those beings who
    may be affected by our actions, and then choose
    that course of action that brings about the
    greatest satisfaction of interests.

34
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Let us call the following The Singer/Bentham
    Interest Principle
  • A necessary and sufficient condition of an
    individuals having interests is that
    individuals capability of suffering or enjoying.
  • Singer believes that this principle is one
    which most of us will intuitively recognize as
    plausible, but he gives the following
    illustration to make its plausibility vivid

35
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • It would be nonsense to assert it was not in the
    interests of a stone to be kicked along a road by
    a schoolboy.
  • A stone does not have interests because it cant
    suffer. Nothing we can do to it could make a
    difference to its welfare.
  • But it would absurd to say that a mouse has no
    interest in not being kicked along the road.
  • It has said interest because it will suffer if it
    is kicked along the road.

36
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Any animal presumably has an interest in not
    suffering and dying so that we can eat it.
  • We have a competing interest in nourishing
    ourselves, and in enjoying the taste of meat and
    the traditions surrounding its consumption (e.g.
    Christmas ham).
  • But in this case the utilitarian case seems to be
    overwhelmingly against meat consumption. Our
    interests in eating meat are trivial in
    comparison to the animals interest in not
    suffering and dying.

37
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Singer argues that the animal liberation
    movement is part of our more general moral
    evolution that has in recent decades extended
    goods and rights to women, non-whites, and
    homosexuals.
  • One might think that the animal liberation
    movement is disanalogous with those other
    movements because while humans deserve to be
    treated equally - since they are in fact
    equal to each other - animals are not equal
    to humans, and thus we are not obligated to treat
    their interests on par with our own.

38
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Singer agrees that humans are superior to animals
    in a variety of significant ways but so are some
    humans superior to other humans in a variety of
    attributes such as strength, intelligence and
    even moral integrity.
  • Thus if we give preference to human interests
    over animal ones because we are (for example)
    more intelligent than them, we should also give
    preference to more intelligent humans over less
    intelligent humans. But clearly we should not
    give preference to more intelligent humans, says
    Singer.
  • The moral imperative to treat beings equally has
    nothing to do with the relevant beings
    abilities, apart from their abilities to suffer
    and enjoy.
  • The essential aim of morality is the minimization
    of suffering and the extension of well-being
    thus the only sensible criterion for inclusion in
    the realm of moral consideration is a beings
    capacity to suffer and enjoy.

39
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Thus Singer does not simply claim that animals
    are equal to humans his position is more
    complex than that.
  • An animal interest is, taken in isolation, as
    equally worthy of moral consideration as a
    similar human interest for example, a chimps
    pleasure from quenching its thirst is, in itself,
    of a moral value equal to a humans equivalent
    pleasure.
  • But because humans generally have a greater
    capacity for good-maximizing, it is often morally
    preferable to prefer humans over animals for
    example a typical human life is usually more
    worth saving over a typical animal life.
  • Of course meat-eating involves giving preference
    to trivial human interests over the fundamental
    interests of animals, and hence is unjustified.

40
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • Lets call Singers position AS
  • O1AS Utilitarians actually have a duty to consume
    meat, so long as the lives of slaughtered
    animals are, on the whole, of greater utility
    than 0. For without the meat industry they
    would never have existed their existence
    contributes to the greater happiness more
    than their non-existence would.
  • Something like this objection is advanced by
    Roger Crisp in Utilitarianism and
    Vegetarianism, International Journal of Applied
    Philosophy, 4.1 41-49.

41
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • R1O1AS One might respond that at present meat
    consumption is not justified by this sort of
    objection since in modern factory farming
    conditions it is very unlikely that the animals
    lives are of greater value than 0 their
    suffering far outweighs their enjoyment.
  • Even if their lives are of greater value than
    0, we might still have (from a utilitarian
    perspective) an obligation to dramatically
    improve their condition.

42
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • R2O1AS By this logic we have a utilitarian
    obligation (it at least is morally permitted by
    utilitarianism) to bring any beings into
    existence whose lives would, on balance, be of
    more utility than 0. For example, it would seem
    to permit the scenario envisioned in the movie
    The Island, where certain humans live
    comfortably but only (unbeknownst to them) to
    provide organs for others. Thus either
  • (i) Utilitarianism has morally absurd
    implications and should be dropped (Singer
    wouldnt argue this way) or
  • (ii) We have misapplied utilitarianism the
    vast amount of time and resources required to
    comfortably raise and slaughter billions of
    animals could be better spent on improving the
    condition of beings already in existence.

43
Singer, Animal Liberation
  • R3O1AS A hybrid utilitarianism which seeks not
    simply to maximize utility but also a good ratio
    of happiness to unhappiness, might respond that
    meat consumption probably creates a situation
    where the overall ratio of happiness to
    unhappiness is much worse than it is without
    meat consumption, even if it maximizes utility.
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