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Towards a consistent animal rights ethics Stijn Bruers
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Ethical dilemmas The trolley and the switch
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Ethical dilemmas The trolley and the switch The trolley and the bridge
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Ethical dilemmas The trolley and the switch The trolley and the bridge The surgeon ???????????????????????????????????? Moral intuition -> ethical principle: everyone has a basic right not to be used as merely means to someone else’s ends. Deontological rule: do not cause harm to a victim if the presence of the victim is necessary in order for your plan to work.
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Burning house dilemmas Your child or... – a dog? – a child with another skin colour?
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3 principles of equality Emotional inequality, but… Equal basic right (no use as merely means) Tolerated choice equality (respect the choice of other helpers) Prioritarian justice: maximise the qualities of life (well-beings) of all sentient beings, giving strong priority to the worst-off individual. (Maximise the qualities of life of the lowest levels, unless this is at the expense of much more well-being of others.)
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3 principles of justice Equal basic right: deontological ethics Tolerated choice equality: ethics of care Prioritarian justice: consequentialist ethics
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Discrimination Causing harm or disadvantage to an individual by making a value-laden distinction between individuals based criteria that are not morally relevant in that situation
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Discrimination Current situation: all sentient humans have the basic right Homo sapiens Sentient beings Moral community
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Discrimination 4 arguments against antropocentrism – The biological species boundary is arbitrary (kingdom, phylum, class, order, infraorder, family, genus, species, subspecies, population) – Farfetched and complicated: one of the many definitions of species refers to possibility for getting fertile offspring – Potential fuzzy boundary: interspecies hybrids, humanzees (chumans) – Reference to genes or appearance, and these are not morally relevant (there is no interest gene connected to all and only humans, -> There is no “essence” related to a species
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Discrimination 4 arguments pro pathocentrism – Virtue ethics and ethics of care: We can feel empathy with all and only sentient beings Developing the virtue of empathy is important – Consequentialist and contractarian ethics: Own well-being matters to us, Impartiality is important (cfr. veil of ignorance) – Deontological ethics Sentient being = being that has interests and can subjectively feel its interests Right = protection of interest – Other ethics Having a consciousness is something much more remarkable than having the genes of an arbitrary species We should protect something highly remarkable
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Ethical illusions
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Intrinsic value of animal Intrinsic value of human (Morally) irrelevant properties
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Ethical illusions Eating meat antidiscrimination Basic right of sentient humans
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Strategy Common moral intuitions Ethical basic principles (axioms) Consistent ethical system? Delete ethical principles based on moral illusions
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The predation problem Should we protect the zebra or the lion? Dominating principle: if… – a sentient being became, by a blind (amoral) evolutionary proces, dependent on the use of other sentient beings for its survival, or if – a systematic interference would result in a loss of biodiversity or ecological side-effects … then we should tolerate this specific predation as long as there are no feasible alternatives.
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