Lecture 6 Flashcards
(26 cards)
the main question in animal ethics is what
do animals have a moral status
to answer the question, we must do what
show that animals possess the relevant property
what is relevant property
To bentham and mill— sentience (capacity to feel pleasure and pain
the table has no moral status because it cannot feel pleasure and pain
does a table have moral ethics? What does this mean
Table has no moral ethics— what does this mean? You cannot wrong the table by any actions
Human beings; are suceptible to moral consideration
what are the 2 relevant properties
sentience and reason
what is sentience
capacity to feel pleasure and pain
what do bentham and mill believe
animals have moral status because they are sentient beings
what does singer believe
is in accordance with bentham and mill
what does kant believe
animals do to have a moral status because they are not rational beings
what are other possible properties
having a soul
having the capacity for human like relationships
being human (aka having human DNA)
being able to enter into social contract
what is singers
consequentialist
what does singer consider to be “good”
this means that for him, the good is the satisfaction of your interest (if you have an interest in avoidng pain, and you avoid the pain, this is good)
what is n interest (principle of equal consideration of interests)
An interest is undefined in the reading; so basically it is undefinable. We can give examples thogh; interest in avoidng pain, satisfying basic needs, developing friendships, to be free to develop ideas etc
is an interest a preference
An interest is NOT a preference; a kid may not want to go to school but he still has an interest in going to school… a kid may have a preference to eat junk food but an interest in healthy food.
A preference is more subjective and an interest is more objective
how do we know our interests
they vary according to out capacities and abilities
a gifted child may have different interest than a non-gifted child. They have different goals
what is the fundamental capacity
the capacity for suffering
Fundamental capacity; to feel pleasure and pain. You must be able to feel this in order to have interests.
If we talk about plants, trees, the environment; these do not have an interest because they supposedly cannot feel pleasure and pain. SO you may think that this entails for environmental ethics; you could criticise him for his view and talk about the environment
why sentience and not reason?
- The problem of arbitrariness
2. The problem of marginal cases
what is The problem of arbitrariness
Arbitrariness; singer talks about many capacity and says that the most basic is sentience, but we can talk about reason, intelligence and self awareness. The only one that is not arbitruary is sentience. The other properties are arbitrary, beyond sentience there is nothing else to cosider
what is the problem of marginal cases
people who are severely disabled mentally, infants, all have limited/no reason but we still consider them human and treat them well
what is equal consideration of interests
Equal consideration of interests; if the dog has an interest in not feeling pain and I have the same interest, we have to weigh the interests the same. The dogs is no more or less than mine.
what is speciesism
To violate the principle of interests; this is the same as racism. To have bias for the members of your own species. This is the same as racism; giving more weight to the pleasure and pain of a human being is not fair.
give examples of speciesism
Speciesism examples;
- The meat industry; how we treat animals. Eating meat is not necessary for survival/healthiness, we just eat meat for the pleasure of it. Have to balance the pleasure we take in eating meat and the interests of the animals. We consider our own interest more than the animals and this is specieisism.
- We treat dogs and cats better than pigs and chickens, there are laws for dogs but not for pigs. We give more weight to the interest in eating pigs than the interest of the pig and having a decent life.
- Experiments on animals; argument is that we need to test on them to save lives, but obviously we experiment on animals for other reasons (cosmetics and shampoo). We force rabbit’s eyes open and pour shampoo into them to see how damaging it might be to the eyes. Our interests are considered more important than the rabbits.
- vivisection; when you open an animal that is still alive and test certain things (like heart beat) and you need to keep the animal alive (this is done on apes and other mammals) Argument is that this is necessary to save lives of humans. Singer proposes a thouh experiment; consider similar human beings to apes and mammals (infants and mentally disabled— in terms of reason and capacity to feel pleasure and pain). Would we be willing to do the same on the humans in order to save lives? If not, we consider our lives and interests more than the other animals.
- In philosophy; singer was one of the first the write on animal ethics. One of the aims of philosophy is to question what people generally take for granted. And when we do not do that with animals, it is showing a bias (not as strong as other points, but it still counts.) In equality literature we talk about the equality between men and women, whites and blacks, but never with animals in philosophy and that is not good.
what is capacity based conception of equality
capacity based conception of equality;
remember that singer proposes the principle of equal consideration— what is this conception? This is the view that equality depends on our capacities. E.g. when we say all human beings are equal we say that they have the same capacityies. When we say that men and women are qequal we say that hace the same capcities. Take the example of the right to vote; men and women have same rational capaities and they have equal rights to vote.
Singer rejects this because if you use this conception, then animals should have the same right to vote. He talks about a few problems with this conception;
1. the inegalitarian concequences; suppose we make 2 groups of humans beings (one group of abobe 100 IQ and the other below) obviously these two groups are not of same capacityies because they have different IQ’s so this says that we should treat them differently. This says that the higher IQ should be masters and below should be slaves (for example). The capacity based theory says that it will always be able to group people and justify different treatments.
does singer agree or reject capacity based conceptions of equality
rejects