Animal Ethics Animal ethics is concerned with the status of animals, whereas concerns itself with the relationship to the environment. I will show the existence of animal ethics depends on the existence of environmental ethics. I will prove this by showing that such philosophers who have practiced animal ethics such as Singer, Regan, and Taylor are limited because they are individualistic. Which means they are limited to animal concerns, and nothing else. But with the environmental ethics such philosophers as Leapold, Westra and Naess look at the environment ethics collectively. Which means they look at the big picture which includes the animals and its environment.
I will first look at the views of Peter Singer, who is a utilitarian. Utilitarian is someone who believes the greatest amount of good for the greatest number. Singer wants the suffering of animals to be taken into consideration. He states “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 the like suffering… .” .
What this means is that the suffering of animals is not justified. He also states how he thinks a major way to stop the suffering of animals is to stop the experimenting on animals. He states.” … the widespread practice of experimenting on other species in order to see if certain substances are safe for human beings, or to test some psychological theory about the effect of severe punishment or learning… .” . When he is talking about the experiments and suffering of animals.
He is concerned most with domestic animals, he is not too concerned with the other animals in the word. Views like these make Singer limited. Singer is limited and individualistic because he is not concerned with the environment in which animals live and since he is a utilitarian, equality is not something he is concerned with. Even other philosopher criticizes the utilitarian point of view exhibited by Singer. Regan protests “Utilitarian has no room for the equal moral rights of different individuals because it has no room for their equal inherent value or worth. What has value for the utilitarian is the satisfaction of an individuals interests, not the individual whose interests they are.” If things are not given equal rights, that includes the environment there will be a tomorrow to look forward to.
Singer has also been known to show a lack of compassion and sympathy. As stated by Westra “IT is probable that, at a minimum, instrumental values has always been ascribed to those animals which have contributed in some way to the human community down through ages… Still it is possible to raise doubts about sympathy, as many claim to have no such feeling, including such animals defenders as Singer.” Westra goes on to describe how Singer is not only unsympathetic to that of animals with intrinsic value but to those people in the third world. Singer feels that since the people of the third world are so faraway that it is not of his concern.
Singer wants the suffering of animals to stop because it is not justified, but what makes the suffering of third world countries justified? Because they are further away? Such individualistic approaches will not save the habitat in which the animals live and without that the environment will not survive. Singer is not the only one with an individualistic approach. Another philosopher of environmental ethics Tom Regan also displays the individualistic approach. Regan believes in Cantianism. What that means is that the individuals have rights. Regan has modified it a bit to say that everyone is subject to a life.
Regan believes that animal and humans all have intrinsic value, therefor they have a right to life. He calls for three changes”1) The total abolition of the use of animals in science. 2) The total dissolution of commercial animal agriculture. 3) The Total elimination of commercial and sport hunting.” He believes that animals should not be treated as our resources. he also believes that since everyone is subject to a life people should not believe in contract arianism. Contract arianism states that in order to gain morality you must be able to sign and understand a contract and if they can not sign a contract (i.
e. infant) you do not have the right to morality. But Regan also views things individualistic ly. He, like Singer also looks at the concerns of animals, of “Value.” Those animals used in science experiments, agriculture, and commercial and sport hunting. But what about the animals not included in the list, who is going to protect the rights of those animals? Without all animals and especially the environment. Regan will not just have to worry about the reform of animal rights.
The last philosopher concerned with animal ethics in which I am going to look at is Paul Taylor. He is an egalitarian, which means everyone’s interests count and count equally with the like interests of everyone’s else’s. He argues that humans are no more valuable than any other living thing put should see themselves as equals. He calls for two changes “1) Every organism, species population, and community of life has a good of its own which moral agents can intentionally further or damage by their actions… 2) The second concept essential to the moral attitude of respect for nature is the idea of inherent worth.” What this means is to respect everything and everyone even if that means the little creepy crawlies on earth. But if we respect everything intern we are respecting nothing.
One of Taylor’s biggest flaws is that he has no hierarchy which intern some animals lose out. Westra sums it up best “Further, it is such an intensely individualistic ethic that it requires me to consider every leaf I might pick from a tree, every earthworm that might be lying across my path. I twill also be extremely different to apply to aggregates, such as species, or community, such as ecosystems.” With no hierarchy he is looking at things individualistic which means something is going to lose out. Another problem with Taylor’s that he can be applied to animal ethics a swell as environmental ethics in order to make a stranger argument he should stick to either one or the other. One way we can avoid this individualism outlook is to look at things holistically such as Leapold. He believes that we should see ourselves not of the Land but as members of the community.
He proposes we can do this by having a land ethic. The Land Ethic states “the land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals a collectively; the land.” This is like an animal ethic but expanded to include the environmental ethics. He also proposes we have a land pyramid which consists of “1) That land that is not merely soil. 2) That the native plants and other animals kept the energy circuit open; others may or may not. 3) That man made changes are of a different order than evolutionary changes, and have effects more comprehensive than is intended or foreseen.” The land pyramid states that changes must be made to the whole ecosystem and everything init.
It looks at things collectively. But lie everything it has its faults. When we are looking at things holistically we are leaving some things out. And for whose to say that the land pyramid is correct, and will work? Whois Leapold to decide how and what is more important than other things. Another philosopher who views the world collectively is Westra. Westra is concerned with the principle of integrity.
She states that ” ‘Integrity ” thus includes the wholeness of a living system.” Therefor she wants to look at the ecosystem as a whole. She protests that there are four sections of ecosystem integrity. They are first ecosystem health. The second is the capacity to withstand stress and regenerate itself afterward. The third is optimum capacity (for place and time, including biodiversity). The fourth is the ability to continue development and change.
With these four features an environment has a good chance of survival. Another reason why she has a holistic approach is because she says “It counsels respect for the basis of life as well as for all entities living within ecosystems, including animals, which would involve the abolition of agribusiness, factory farming, and all other wasteful, explosive practices.” She believes everything should be looked at as equal. But her views are too controversial. Westra sates that there should be an abolition of agribusiness, but she herself admits that she eats ‘free-range’ chicken. It to is an agribusiness so why does it make it OK for free-range? And if we are looking at things holistically who is she to say that one type of business is any better than factory farming or agribusiness. Sure they are taking advantage of animals, but if she is to look at things holistically any business that runs successfully involves expletive practices in some manner.
The last philosopher of environmental ethics in which I am going to look at is Arne Naess. He looks at the environment in terms of deep ecology. What this means is that 1) holistic perspective. 2) biospheric al egalitarianism (everyone’s valuable).
3) principles of diversity and symbiosis. 4), no racism, no sexism. 5) fight against pollution and resource depletion. 6) complexity not completion, cutting up science. 7) local autonomy and decentralization. They are a matter of steps or hierarchy and you have to start from the bottom and start fixing till you make it to the top.
Or should I say if you make it to the top because if you can not fix each level you can not continue to the next level until its fixed. But this way of looking at things can cause problems. Viewing the world like this could leave us right were we started from because if we can not fix it we can not move on. Another problem is when you get near the top of the steps you hit a point where you should look at things threw an egalitarian point of view. Which can bring you back to where you started from because you are supposed to respect everything which intern you end up respecting nothing. In conclusion do to the arguments I have shown, we can conclude the existence of animal ethics depends on the existence of environmental ethics.
Have shown this by demonstrating the individualistic ways in which Singer, Regan and Taylor look at this world will only save the rights of animals, and the world can not survive with just animals. I have also shown that by demonstrating the holistic views of Leapold, Westra, and Naess will preserve the rights of the environmental as a whole.