ETHICS AND ENVIRONMENT
(1) A SHORT GUIDE TO ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS
J. Baird Callicott, "The Search For an Environmental Ethics", in W.H.
Shaw, Social and Personal Ethics (Wadsworth, 1996).
Reading: Peter Singer, Equality
for Animals / Peter Singer, Do
Animals Feel Pain?, Do
Animals Feel Pain? (another link)
Tom Regan, The
Case for Animal Rights
ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS: A study of conceptual and moral
issues concerning the growth of human population, consumption of
resources, animal rights, the moral status of nature and species,
etc.
SOME ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS
- Why should we care about the planet? Or about its non human
residents?
- Do we have any obligations to future generations?
- Who, or what, are the proper subjects of moral
considerations?
- Do animals have any serious moral standing? Do they have moral
rights?
- Can we use animals and nature in any way that suits us?
- On what foundations should we rest our concern for
rain-forest, marine ecology, or natural landscapes?
TWO KINDS OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGIES
- Morally-Indirect Environmental Strategies (this is what
Regan calls "the indirect duty view):
- We ought to protect the natural environment because, in the
long run, it is good for us.
- Morally-Direct Environmental Strategies:
- We ought to protect the natural environment because it is
good for natural environment
- or something which is part of natural environment
- the nature contains something that is intrinsically
good
- the natural environment itself, or some objects in it, or
some features of these objects, are intrinsically good)
CALLICOTT (AND OTHERS) ON THREE SECULAR
APPROACHES TO ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS
- Traditional and protracted humanism (homo-centrism):
- Only humans (both current and future) have moral
standing
- The natural environment must be protected only in so far
as, in the long run, it is good for humans.
- we only have indirect duties to animals
- Extensionism: Standard ethical principles (e.g., utility
principle, imperatives analogous to those developed by Kant and
Kantian philosophers, rights, etc.) apply to animals. That
is, all sentient beings (both humans and animals), or all beings
having certain level of mental development, have moral standing.
- Singer: What ultimately matters is animal suffering.
- Regan: What ultimately matters are animal rights. (See:
The
Case for Animal Rights )
- Ecocentrism: Some non-sentient beings and organisms have moral
standing.
- Some individual being in nature have moral standing
- Species, ecosystems, even the nature as a whole may have
moral standing.
- A problem -- it seems like we need to base this view
on different principles than those proposed by utilitarians and
Kantians. So, how to justify this view?
THE GENERAL IDEA OF ENVIRONMENTAL ARGUMENTS
- A General Moral Principle: If a practice or action
destroys some intrinsic goodness (or brings about some intrinsic
evil), then it is morally wrong except if we have very good
reasons for continuing this practice.
- A Factual Claim: Certain forms of treating the natural
environment destroy some intrinsic goodness and/or bring about
some intrinsic evils.
- A Specific Moral Claim: There are no good reasons for
continuing these forms of treating the natural environment.
- Therefore, these forms of treating the natural
environment are morally wrong. [from (1)-(4)]
INTRINSIC VALUE AND THE ISOLATION TEST
- x has an intrinsic value (it is intrinsically good or bad) if
an only if it has some value (it is good, or it is bad) taken in
itself. (Otherwise an object may have only, at most, instrumental
value.)
- We determine whether or not something has an intrinsic value
by assessing it in isolation from its results (what it leads to)
and its causes (how did it arise)
WHAT KIND OF THINGS CAN HAVE INTRINSIC VALUE?
- HEDONISM (Bentham and Mil, Singer(?)):
- Pain and suffering are intrinsically bad no matter whose
pain or suffering it is.
- Pleasure and happiness are intrinsically good no matter
whose pleasure or happiness it is. pain and pleasure, no matter
whose pleasure it is.
- EUDAIMONISM (Aristotle): happiness (eudaimonia,
flourishing) is intrinsically good unhappiness is
intrinsically bad.
- PREFERENCE SATISFACTION THEORIES (economists,
perhaps Singer):
- the satisfaction (and frustration) of someone's interests
(desires, preferences), no matter whose interests they
are.
- "AESTHETICISM" (G.E. Moore, Stef):
- The experience of beauty is intrinsically good ( no matter
who has this experience).
- Perhaps beauty itself is intrinsically good.
- "VITALISM" (Paul W. Taylor, "The Ethics of
Respect for Nature"):
- Life itself, there being something alive (no matter whose
life it is.
- "ECO-HARMONISM" (Aldo Leopold, J. Baird
Callicott)
- there being ecosystems that function and develop in
harmonious ways.
- PLURALISM (Stef): many different things are
intrinsically valuable
(2) SINGER ON ANIMAL LIBERATION
THE TRADITIONAL ATTITUDES TOWARDS ANIMALS (TATA)
A. Pointless cruelty to animals is morally wrong; we
ought to eliminate such cruelty.
B. We ought to eliminate also the unnecessary suffering of
animals; e.g. suffering that does not lead to the satisfaction of
any important human needs.
C. It is morally permissible to use animals to satisfy important
human interests, and needs.
D. In general, it is permissible to experiment on animals.
E. It is also permissible to raise them for food.
THE BACKGROUND FOR SINGER'S
ARGUMENT: FEATURES THAT SEEM
|
MORALLY IRRELEVANT
|
MORALLY RELEVANT
|
- How tall or short or heavy or light someone is?
- What is the color of one's eyes or hair or
skin?
- What is someone's gender or race?
|
- How much would someone suffer?
- Would someone's interests be satisfied or
frustrated? (Singer would stop here, Regan goes
further)
- Is someone treated merely as a means?
- Is someone (ab)used?
- Are someone's autonomy violated?
- Do we disrespect someone who has
"inherent" value?
|
SINGER'S MAIN POINT: The moral basis of equality among
humans is not equality in fact, but the following principle of equal
consideration of interests:
"...the interests of every being that has interests are to be taken
into account and treated equally with the like interests of any other
being".
"If a being suffers, there can be no moral justification for refusing
to take that suffering into consideration, and, indeed, to count it
equally with the like suffering (if rough comparisons can be made) of
any other being" .
A WAY TO UNDERSTAND SINGER'S ARGUMENT AGAINST (TATA)
1. A General Moral Principle: If a practice or
action causes excruciating suffering, then it is morally wrong
except if we have very good reasons for continuing this
practice.
2. A Factual Claim: Raising animals for food causes
excruciating suffering (an so does using them in experiments).
3. A Specific Moral Claim: There are no good reasons for
raising animals for food and using them in experiments
___________
4. Therefore, it is morally wrong to raise animals for food and to
use them in experiments. [(1)-(4)]
SOME OBJECTIONS TO THIS ARGUMENT
- Animal Suffering: Animals do not suffer. (Or, they
do not suffer much; or, we do not know that they suffer.)
- The Argument From 'Might': We have the power and
technical means to use animals to satisfy our important interests
and needs. Hence, using them is permissible.
- The Argument From What Is Frequently Done (Is A Part of the
Human Tradition) Animals are frequently used to satisfy
important human interests, needs, and goals. . . It is part of the
commonly accepted tradition to use animals for food and to
experiment on animals. . . It seems obvious that . . .
- The Argument From Species Differences: Human
beings belong to one biological species and animals belong to
another biological species.
- The Argument From Mental Differences: Human beings
are more intelligent than lower animals.
- "Too Much Burden": It would cost us too much to
change our attitude to animals. Changing this attitude is too
difficult. Our interests outweigh their interests.
- "Where Is the Limit" : If we change our attitude
to animals, we will have to change our attitude to plants, we'll
have to stop using them. Singer's argument leads to an
absurdity.
- A Religious Argument (the Dominion Argument): Man
has dominion over the animals. God does not prohibit using
animals. It is permissible to use animals to satisfy our needs and
interests.
(3) THE MORAL BASIS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
ETHIC
SOME CRITICISMS OF TRADITIONAL AND PROTRACTED HUMANISM
[HOMO-CENTRISM, HUMAN CHAUVINISM (Sylvan, Val
Plumwood)]
Compare the following: "treasure the Chesapeake"; "use
the Chesapeake efficiently".
In 1991 many registrants bought the plate bearing the motto
"treasure the Chesapeake", paying $20 to an environmental fund
(see Mark Sagoff, "Zuckerman's Dilemma..." in Ch. Pierce and D.
VanDeVeer, People, Penguins and Plastic Trees (Wadsworth,
1995))
This attitude shows that we do recognize the difference respecting
(valuing) something taken in itself and protecting it because it
is a valuable means to something.
Homo-centrism cannot account for this attitude.
SINGER'S EXTENSIONISM
BASIC TENETS OF SINGER'S VIEW: Similar
interests must be treated similarly; sentience is morally
relevant
What matters is suffering, pleasure and so on including animal
suffering, pleasure, interests. "...the interests of every being
that has interests are to be taken into account and treated
equally with the like interests of any other being".
BASIC TENETS OF REGAN'S VIEW: Some animals are sufficiently
like humans, they are experiencing subjects of a life
Thus, they have "inherent worth."
Hence, they have basic moral rights
CALLICOTT'S SPECIFIC CRITICISMS
OF EXTENSIONISM
Specific criticism of Singer: Animal welfare is not
protected adequately. E.g., imagine that animals raised for
consumption live in comfort, and are killed painlessly; on
Singer's view, would vegetarianism be then obligatory?
Regan escapes this criticism; the view is internally coherent;
e.g., it gives adequate protection to animals.
CALLICOTT'S GENERAL CRITICISMS OF EXTENSIONISM
Extensionism does not support well enough basic
environmental goals.
Non-sentient beings and objects: Extensionism gives no direct
protection to plants, non-sentient animals, species per se (see
Callicott, 197), forests, natural objects, ecosystems, and so
on.
Ecological "Facts of Life": "To the extent that the animals
liberation/animal rights ethics condemn the taking of life or the
infliction of pain on a sentient being, they are irreconcilably at
odds with the ecological "facts of life" (Callicott, 196).
Conflicts of Interests:: These views might imply a program of
humane predator extermination, sacrificing an entire species of
plans for an individual animal, sacrificing wild animals for
domestic animals, and so on.
LAND ETHICS
- Aldo Leopold: "All ethics... rest upon a single premise: that
the individual is a member of a community of interdependent
parts... The land ethics simply enlarges the boundaries of the
community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or
collectively: the land" (quoted in Shaw, 198).
- Callicott: "[land ethics] is in sharp contrast to
traditional Western humanism... [it] provides moral
standing for both environmental individuals and for the
environment as a whole". Leopold: "a land ethics changes the role
of Homo Sapiens from conqueror of the land community to plain
member and citizen of it. It implies respect for fellow members
and also respect for the community as such" (199)
DANGERS OF AN UNTEMPERED HOLISM
"Environmental fascism" or are there too many of us?
A reply: human population should be scaled down gradually; the
individual humans should be respected. [On this view, do
individual humans have moral rights?]
ANIMALS IN THE ECO-ETHICS
Basic tenets: The moral foundation is
provided not by rights but by the principle of respect; we must
respect individual animals, we may use them with respect
(Callicott's favorite example are the Ojibwa (see Shaw, 201-202)
who provide an example of approach based on such respect)
Objectives and Implications: human use should enhance
the diversity of the biotic community, its integrity, stability,
and beauty.
We must use respectfully the individual plant, animal, even rock
or river, they deserve to be treated respectfully.
ONE PRACTICAL IMPLICATION OF ECO-ETHICS
Callicott: "because a vegetarian diet more directly and
efficiently than a meat-centered diet, conducts solar energy into
human bodies, the practice of vegetarianism could not only help
reduce human hunger and animal suffering, it would free more land
and solar energy for the restoration of natural communities" (203)