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The Ethics of Animal Research:

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Title: The Ethics of Animal Research:


1
The Ethics of Animal Research What Are the
Prospects for Agreement? David DeGrazia
2
BIOMEDICINE AND ANIMAL ADVOCATES
  • Biomedicine df. Those who work in medicine or
    the life sciences, including but not limited to
    those doing animal research.
  • Animal advocates (animal protection community)
    df. People who want to protect the interests of
    animals and who think that much of the use of
    animals in medical research is unjustified.

3
THE VIEW OF BIOMEDICINE
  • Because animal research is required for the
    progress of medicine and the betterment of human
    health it is morally justified.
  • Those who think that it is not morally justified
    are said, by biomedicine, to be irrational,
    antiscience, misanthropic, extremists.
  • Because of this, most, but not all, people in
    biomedicine think that the views of animal
    advocates should not be taken seriously.

4
PROBLEMS FOR BIOMEDICINE
  • DeGrazia says that people in biomedicine have not
    engaged in the kind of prolonged and critical
    thinking that is required in order to determine
    the moral status of animals and their use in
    medical research.
  • He accuses them of making philosophical and
    conceptual errors, and says that not many have
    had any ethical training and are unfamiliar with
    the literature on animal rights.
  • Accordingly, few of them recognize that there is
    significant merit to the opposing position the
    position of animal advocacy maintaining that
    animal welfare and rights should be considered.

5
ANIMAL PROTECTION
  • Some people in the animal protection community
    want all animal research to stop in which animals
    are harmed. Tom Regan and Evelyn Pluhar are
    examples.
  • Animal research is acceptable to utilitarians
    when the benefits of the research are greater
    than harms to the animals used and the costs
    involved, but where the interests of animal
    subjects (e.g. to avoid suffering) are given the
    same moral weight that we give comparable human
    interests. Peter Singer and R. G. Frey are
    examples.
  • All at least are very interested in the welfare
    of animals, and think that much of current animal
    research is unjustified.

6
DEGRAZIAS VIEW
  • DeGrazia does not commit to the strong view that
    all animal research is wrong, or the utilitarian
    view, but his view shares with these views the
    framework of equal consideration of animals.
  • Equal consideration for animals means that we
    must give equal moral weight to comparable
    interests, no matter who has those interests.

7
THE UNEQUAL CONSIDERATION VIEW
  • DeGrazia does recognize though that there are
    arguments against the equal consideration view
    that are themselves worthy of consideration.
  • The unequal consideration view gives moral
    weight to animals comparable interests in
    accordance with the animals cognitive,
    affective, and social complexity a progressive
    sliding scale view.
  • This view, which is opposed to his own equal
    consideration view, is one that he thinks ought
    to be considered since he recognizes that he
    might be mistaken about equal consideration.

8
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT I
  • DeGrazia thinks that the biomedical and the
    animal protection groups can agree on some
    important things, and have much common ground on
    which they can build.
  • 1. All can agree, and should agree, that the use
    of animals in medical research raises important
    ethical questions.
  • Anyone who denies that there is no ethical issue
    in using animals in biomedical research is simply
    wrong.

9
THE MORAL STATUS OF ANIMALS
  • Maintaining that animals have moral status means
    that their interests are morally important apart
    from how they affect the interests of humans.
  • DeGrazia The interests of an animal may be
    thought of as components of well-being. For
    example, sentient animals have an interest in
    avoiding pain, distress, and suffering. As we do
    too.
  • The moral status of an animal indicates that it
    is wrong to inflict pain (misery, suffering) on
    the animal because of the pain that the animal
    experiences, and not, for instance, because the
    animal is the property of some human being, or
    because of the effect of hurting the animal on
    human beings. It is wrong because of the effect
    on the animal itself.

10
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT II III
  • 2. Sentient animals deserve moral protection.
  • An animal is sentient if it has feelings of any
    sort conscious sensations, such as pains
    emotional states, such as fear or suffering.
  • At least vertebrate animals those with a spinal
    column are very likely sentient.
  • 3. Many animals are capable of experiencing
    pain, distress (including fear, boredom, and
    discomfort) and suffering.
  • Because these things are unpleasant, and may be
    excruciating, they deserve moral consideration.

11
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT IV V
  • 4. Animals quality of life their experiential
    well-being deserves to be protected.
  • Although talk of animal quality of life raises
    some controversial issues such as whether or
    not animals have an interest in staying alive
    what is not controversial is that animals have
    an interest in experiential well-being, a good
    quality of life.
  • 5. Humane care of highly social animals such
    as apes, monkeys, and wolves - requires access to
    conspecifics. members of the same species.
  • Highly social animals that are used in research
    should then have access to other animals of their
    kind.

12
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT VI VII
  • 6. Very strong protections should be provided to
    certain animals (for instance, chimpanzees should
    not be killed to control population.)
  • The lives of some animals should be protected in
    addition to their experiential well-being. If
    some animals have life interests then killing
    them is wrong. (Killing animal subjects in
    research is not normally prohibited, it is only
    expected that the killing be as painless as
    possible.)
  • 7. Animals should not be used in research when
    there is another alternative, and search for
    alternatives should be ongoing.

13
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT VIII IX
  • 8. Promoting human health is an extremely
    important biomedical goal.
  • However, just because a goal is worthy does not
    justify any and all means of reaching the goal.
  • 9. There are some morally significant
    differences between humans and other animals.
  • DeGrazia points out that the views of animal
    advocates are consistent with that view, but he
    says that many people in biomedicine are not
    aware of that.

14
MORALLY SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES I
  • The principle of autonomy, or respect for the
    self-regarding decisions of individuals capable
    of autonomous decision making and action,
    applies to competent adult human beings but to
    very few, if any, animals.
  • Respect for autonomy opposes paternalism towards
    individuals who have the capacity to decide for
    themselves what is in their interests.
  • Since most? all? nonhuman animals are not
    autonomous, it is often appropriate to limit
    their liberty in ways that promote their best
    interests.
  • Where there is no autonomy to respect the
    principles of beneficence (promoting best
    interests) and respect for autonomy cannot
    conflict.
  • Where there is autonomy to respect, paternalism
    becomes morally problematic.

15
MORALLY SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES II
  • Even if both animals and humans have an interest
    in staying alive, killing humans is taken to be
    worse than killing animals, including those
    animals that are taken to have moral status.
  • The view that it is worse to kill a human than an
    animal is typically supported by animal
    advocates.

16
POSSIBLE POINTS OF AGREEMENT X
  • 10. Some animal research is justified.
  • It is justified when a research animal is not
    harmed, or when it only involves minimal risk or
    harm to the animal.
  • Some animal research does benefit humans.
  • It may also benefit other animals, at least of
    the same species.
  • Therapeutic research can benefit an animal that
    is used in such research since the point of
    therapeutic research is to benefit the subjects
    used in the research.

17
SOME POINTS OF DISAGREEMENT
  • The following are points on which the biomedical
    and the animal protection communities are likely
    to disagree
  • 1. The moral status of animals in relation to
    humans. 2. When, or in which specific
    circumstances, testing on animals that harms
    animals is justified to promote human health.
  • 3. Current levels of protection for animals in
    animal research are adequate.
  • 4. Animal life is worthy of moral protection.

18
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE I
  • 1. Workers in animal research should be required
    to take courses in animal ethics. Such education
    would make them see that the issues are complex
    and important. In addition, education breeds
    tolerance of opposing views.
  • 2. More militant animal advocates should
    recognize reasonable disagreement and cease
    attempting to intimidate their opponents.
  • 3. The biomedical community should recognize and
    seriously consider animal suffering.

19
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE II
  • 4. Animal advocates should give credit to
    biomedicine where such credit is due.
  • 5. People on both sides should be educated in
    ethics so they can discuss the issues
    intelligently.
  • 6. The animal protection people should recognize
    that at least some animal research is justified.

20
WHAT SHOULD BE DONE III
  • 7. Animal research ethics committees should
    include at least one dedicated animal advocate
    who seriously questions the value of most animal
    research.
  • 8. Housing conditions for research animals should
    be improved.
  • 9. Both the biomedical and the animal protection
    groups can, and should, support ways of
    eliminating the pain, suffering, and distress of
    animals used in animal research.
  • 10. Governments should invest in seeking
    alternatives to the use of animals in medical
    research.
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