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Philosophy >
General AR Philosophy
The Case for Animal Rights
by Tom Regan
I regard myself as an advocate of animal rights -- as a part of the animal
rights movement. That movement, as I conceive it, is committed to a number
of goals, including:
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the total abolition of the use of animals in science;
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the total dissolution of commercial animal agriculture;
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the total elimination of commercial and sport hunting and trapping.
There are, I know, people who profess to believe in animal
rights but do not avow these goals. Factory farming, they say, is wrong --
it violates animals' rights -- but traditional animal agriculture is all
right. Toxicity tests of cosmetics on animals violates their rights, but
important medical research -- cancer research, for example -- does not.
The clubbing of baby seals is abhorrent, but not the harvesting of adult
seals. I used to think I understood this reasoning. Not any more. You
don't change unjust institutions by tidying them up.
What's wrong -- fundamentally wrong -- with the way animals are treated
isn't the details that vary from case to case. It's the whole system. The
forlornness of the veal calf is pathetic, heart wrenching; the pulsing
pain of the chimp with electrodes planted deep in her brain is repulsive;
the slow, torturous death of a raccoon caught in the leg-hold trap is
agonizing. But what is wrong isn't the pain, isn't the suffering, isn't
the deprivation. These compound what's wrong. Sometimes -- often -- they
make it much worse. But they are not the fundamental wrong.
The fundamental wrong is the system that allows us to view animals as
our resources, here for us -- to be eaten, or surgically
manipulated, or exploited for sport or money. Once we accept this view of
animals -- as our resources -- the rest is as predictable as it is
regrettable. Why worry about their loneliness, their pain, their death?
Since animals exist for us, to benefit us in one way or another, what
harms them really doesn't matter -- or matters only if it starts to bother
us, makes us feel a trifle uneasy when we eat our veal escalope, for
example. So, yes, let us get veal calves out of solitary confinement, give
them more space, a little straw, a few companions. But let us keep our
veal escalope.
But a little straw, more space and a few companions won't eliminate --
won't even touch -- the basic wrong that attaches to our viewing and
treating these animals as our resources. A veal calf killed to be eaten
after living in close confinement is viewed and treated in this way: but
so, too, is another who is raised (as they say) "more humanely". To right
the wrong of our treatment of farm animals requires more than making
rearing methods "more humane"; it requires the total dissolution of
commercial animal agriculture.
How we do this, whether we do it or, as in the case of animals in
science, whether and how we abolish their use -- these are to a large
extent political questions. People must change their beliefs before they
change their habits. Enough people, especially those elected to public
office, must believe in change -- must want it -- before we will have laws
that protect the rights of animals. This process of change is very
complicated, very demanding, very exhausting, calling for the efforts of
many hands in education, publicity, political organization and activity,
down to the licking of envelopes and stamps. As a trained and practising
philosopher, the sort of contribution I can make is limited but, I like to
think, important. The currency of philosophy is ideas -- their meaning and
rational foundation -- not the nuts and bolts of the legislative process,
say, or the mechanics of community organization. That's what I have been
exploring over the past ten years or so in my essays and talks and, most
recently, in my book The Case for Animal Rights. I believe the
major conclusions I reach in the book are true because they are supported
by the weight of the best arguments. I believe the idea of animal rights
has reason, not just emotion, on its side.
In the space I have at my disposal here I can only sketch, in the
barest outline, some of the main features of the book. It's main themes --
and we should not be surprised by this -- involve asking and answering
deep, foundational moral questions about what morality is, how it should
be understood and what is the best moral theory, all considered. I hope I
can convey something of the shape I think this theory takes. The attempt
to do so will be (to use a word a friendly critic once used to describe my
work) cerebral, perhaps too cerebral. But this is misleading. My feelings
about how animals are sometimes treated run just as deep and just as
strong as those of my more volatile compatriots. Philosophers do -- to use
the jargon of the day -- have a right side to their brains. If it's the
left side we contribute (or mainly should), that's because what talents we
have reside there.
How to proceed? We begin by asking how the moral status of animals has
been understood by thinkers who deny that animals have rights. Then we
test the mettle of their ideas by seeing how well they stand up under the
heat of fair criticism. If we start our thinking in this way, we soon find
that some people believe that we have no direct duties to animals, that we
owe nothing to them, that we can do nothing that wrongs them. Rather, we
can do wrong acts that involve animals, and so we have duties regarding
them, though none to them. Such views may be called indirect duty views.
By way of illustration: suppose your neighbor kicks your dog. Then your
neighbor has done something wrong. But not to your dog. The wrong that has
been done is a wrong to you. After all, it is wrong to upset people, and
your neighbor's kicking your dog upsets you. So you are the one who is
wronged, not your dog. Or again: by kicking your dog your neighbor damages
your property. And since it is wrong to damage another person's property,
your neighbor has done something wrong -- to you, of course -- not to your
dog. Your neighbor no more wrongs your dog than your car would be wronged
if the windshield were smashed. Your neighbor's duties involving your dog
are indirect duties to you. More generally, all of our duties regarding
animals are indirect duties to one another -- to humanity.
How could someone try to justify such a view? Someone might say that
your dog doesn't feel anything and so isn't hurt by your neighbor's kick,
doesn't care about the pain because none is felt, is as unaware of
anything as is your windshield. Someone might say this, but no rational
person will, since, among other considerations, such a view will commit
anyone who holds it to the position that no human being feels pain either
-- that human beings also don't care about what happens to them. A second
possibility is that though both humans and your dog are hurt when kicked,
it is only human pain that matters. But, again, no rational person can
believe this. Pain is pain wherever it occurs. If your neighbor's causing
you pain is wrong because of the pain that is caused, we cannot rationally
ignore or dismiss the moral relevance of the pain that your dog feels.
Philosophers who hold indirect duty views -- and many still do -- have
come to understand that they must avoid the two defects just noted: that
is, both the view that animals don't feel anything as well as the idea
that only human pain can be morally relevant. Among such thinkers the sort
of view now favoured is one or other form of what is called
contractarianism.
Here, very crudely, is the root idea: morality consists of a set of
rules that individuals voluntarily agree to abide by, as we do when we
sign a contract (hence the name contractarianism). Those who understand
and accept the terms of the contract are covered directly; they have
rights created and recognized by, and protected in, the contract. And
these contractors can also have protection spelled out for others who,
thought they lack the ability to understand morality and so cannot sign
the contract themselves, are loved or cherished by those who can. Thus
young children, for example, are unable to sign contracts and lack rights.
But they are protected by the contract nonetheless because of the
sentimental interests of others, most notably their parents. So we have,
then, duties involving these children, duties regarding them, but no
duties to them. Our duties in this case are indirect duties to other human
beings, usually their parents.
As for animals, since they cannot understand contracts, they obviously
cannot sign; and since they cannot sign, they have no rights. Like
children, however, some animals are the objects of the sentimental
interest of others. You, for example, love your dog or cat. So those
animals that enough people care about (companion animals, whales, baby
seals, the American bald eagle), though they lack rights themselves, will
be protected because of the sentimental interests of people. I have, then,
according to contractarianism, no duty directly to your dog or any other
animal, not even the duty not to cause them pain or suffering; my duty not
to hurt them is a duty I have to those people who care about what happens
to them. As for other animals, where no or little sentimental interest is
present -- in the case of farm animals, for example, or laboratory rats --
what duties we have grow weaker and weaker, perhaps to the vanishing
point. The pain and death they endure, though real, are not wrong if no
one cares about them.
When it comes to the moral status of animals, contractarianism could be
a hard view to refute if it were an adequate theoretical approach to the
moral status of human beings. It is not adequate in this latter respect,
however, which makes the question of its adequacy in the former case,
regarding animals, utterly moot. For consider: morality, according to the
(crude) contractarian position before us, consists of rules that people
agree to abide by. What people? Well, enough to make a difference --
enough, that is, collectively to have the power to enforce the
rules that are drawn up in the contract. That is very well and good for
the signatories but not so good for anyone who is not asked to sign. And
there is nothing in contractarianism of the sort we are discussing that
guarantees or requires that everyone will have a chance to participate
equally in framing the rules of morality. The result is that this approach
to ethics could sanction the most blatant forms of social, economic, moral
and political injustice, ranging from a repressive caste system to
systematic racial or sexual discrimination. Might, according to this
theory, does make right. Let those who are the victims of injustice suffer
as they will. It matters not so long as no one else -- no contractor, or
too few of them -- cares about it. Such a theory takes one's moral breath
away ... as if, for example, there would be nothing wrong with apartheid
in South Africa if few white South Africans were upset by it. A theory
with so little to recommend it at the level of the ethics of our treatment
of our fellow humans cannot have anything more to recommend it when it
comes to the ethics of how we treat our fellow animals.
The version of contractarianism just examined is, as I have noted, a
crude variety, and in fairness to those of a contractarian persuasion it
must be noted that much more refined, subtle and ingenious varieties are
possible. For example, John Rawls, in his A Theory of Justice, sets
forth a version of contractarianism that forces contractors to ignore the
accidental features of being a human being -- for example, whether one is
white or black, male or female, a genius or of modest intellect. Only by
ignoring such features, Rawls believes, can we ensure that the principles
of justice that contractors would agree upon are not based on bias or
prejudice. Despite the improvement of such a view over the cruder forms of
contractarianism, it remains deficient; it systematically denies that we
have direct duties to those human beings who do not have a sense of
justice -- young children, for instance, and many mentally retarded
humans. And yet it seems reasonably certain that, were we to torture a
young child or retarded elder, we would be doing something that wronged
him or her, not something that would be wrong if (and only if) other
humans with a sense of justice were upset. And since this is true in the
case of these humans, we cannot rationally deny the same in the case of
animals.
Indirect duty views, then, including the best among them, fail to
command our rational assent. Whatever ethical theory we should accept
rationally, therefore, it must at least recognize that we have some duties
directly to animals, just as we have some duties directly to each other.
The next two theories I'll sketch attempt to meet this requirement.
The first I call the cruelty-kindness view. Simply stated, this says
that we have a direct duty to be kind to animals and a direct duty not to
be cruel to them. Despite the familiar, reassuring ring of these ideas, I
do not believe that this view offers an adequate theory. To make this
clearer, consider kindness. A kind person acts from a certain kind of
motive -- compassion or concern, for example. And that is a virtue. But
there is no guarantee that a kind act is a right act. If I am a generous
racist, for example, I will be inclined to act kindly towards members of
my own race, favouring their interests above those of others. My kindness
would be real and, so far as it goes, good. But I trust it is too obvious
to require argument that my kind acts may not be above moral reproach --
may, in fact, be positively wrong because rooted in injustice. So
kindness, notwithstanding its status as a virtue to be encouraged, simply
will not carry the weight of a theory of right action.
Cruelty fares no better. People or their acts are cruel if they display
either a lack of sympathy or, worse, the presence of enjoyment in
another's suffering. Cruelty in all its guises is a bad thing, a tragic
human failing. But just as a person's being motivated by kindness does not
guarantee that he or she does what is right, so the absence of cruelty
does not ensure that he or she avoids doing what is wrong. Many people who
perform abortions, for example, are not cruel, sadistic people. But that
fact alone does not settle the terribly difficult question of the morality
of abortion. The case is no different when we examine the ethics of our
treatment of animals. So, yes, let us be for kindness and against cruelty.
But let us not suppose that being for the one and against the other
answers questions about moral right and wrong.
Some people think that the theory we are looking for is utilitarianism.
A utilitarian accepts two moral principles. The first is that of equality:
everyone's interests count, and similar interests must be counted as
having similar weight or importance. White or black, American or Iranian,
human or animal -- everyone's pain or frustration matter, and matter just
as much as the equivalent pain or frustration of anyone else. The second
principle a utilitarian accepts is that of utility: do the act that will
bring about the best balance between satisfaction and frustration for
everyone affected by the outcome.
As a utilitarian, then, here is how I am to approach the task of
deciding what I morally ought to do: I must ask who will be affected if I
choose to do one thing rather than another, how much each individual will
be affected, and where the best results are most likely to lie -- which
option, in other words, is most likely to bring about the best results,
the best balance between satisfaction and frustration. That option,
whatever it may be, is the one I ought to choose. That is where my moral
duty lies.
The great appeal of utilitarianism rests with its uncompromising
egalitarianism: everyone's interests count and count as much as the
like interests of everyone else. The kind of odious discrimination that
some forms of contractarianism can justify -- discrimination based on race
or sex, for example -- seems disallowed in principle by utilitarianism, as
is speciesism, systematic discrimination based on species membership.
The equality we find in utilitarianism, however, is not the sort an
advocate of animal or human rights should have in mind. Utilitarianism 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 individual's interests, not the
individual whose interests they are. A universe in which you satisfy your
desire for water, food and warmth is, other things being equal, better
than a universe in which these desires are frustrated. And the same is
true in the case of an animal with similar desires. But neither you nor
the animal have any value in your own right. Only your feelings do.
Here is an analogy to make the philosophical point clearer: a cup
contains different liquids, sometimes sweet, sometimes bitter, sometimes a
mix of the two. What has value are the liquids: the sweeter the better,
the bitterer the worse. The cup, the container, has no value. It is what
goes into it, now what they go into, that has value. For the utilitarian
you and I are like the cup; we have no value as individuals and thus no
equal value. What has value is what goes into us, what we serve as
receptacles for; our feelings of satisfaction have positive value, our
feelings of frustration negative value.
Serious problems arise for utilitarianism when we remind ourselves that
it enjoins us to bring about the best consequences. What does this mean?
It doesn't mean the best consequences for me alone, or for my family or
friends, or any other person taken individually. No, what we must do is,
roughly, as follows: we must add up (somehow!) the separate satisfactions
and frustrations of everyone likely to be affected by our choice, the
satisfactions in one column, the frustrations in the other. We must total
each column for for each of the options before us. That is what it means
to say the theory is aggregative. And them we must choose that option
which is most likely to bring about the best balance of totaled
satisfactions over totaled frustrations. Whatever act would lead to this
outcome is the one we ought morally to perform -- it is where our moral
duty lies. And that act quite clearly might not be the same one that would
bring about the best results for me personally, or for my family or
friends, or for a lab animal. The best aggregated consequences for
everyone concerned are not necessarily the best for each individual.
That utilitarianism is an aggregative theory -- different individuals'
satisfactions or frustrations are added, or summed, or totaled -- is the
key objection to this theory. My Aunt Bea is old, inactive, a cranky, sour
person, though not physically ill. She prefers to go on living. She is
also rather rich. I could make a fortune if I could get my hands on her
money, money she intends to give me in any event, after she dies, but
which she refuses to give me now. In order to avoid a huge tax bite, I
plan to donate a handsome sum of my profits to the local children's
hospital. Many, many children will benefit from my generosity, and much
joy will be brought to their parents, relatives and friends. If I don't
get the money rather soon, all these ambitions will come to naught. The
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make a real killing will be gone. Why,
then, not kill my Aunt Bea? Of course, I might get caught. But I'm
no fool and, besides, her doctor can be counted on to cooperate (he has an
eye for the same investment and I happen to know a good deal about his
shady past). The deed can be done ... professionally, shall we say. There
is very little chance of getting caught. And as for my conscience
being guilt-ridden, I am a resourceful sort of fellow and will take more
than sufficient comfort -- as I lie on the beach at Acapulco -- in
contemplating the joy and health I have brought to so many others.
Suppose Aunt Bea is killed and the rest of the story comes out as told.
Would I have done anything wrong? Anything immoral? One would have thought
that I had. Not according to utilitarianism. Since what I have done has
brought about the best balance between totaled satisfaction and
frustration for all those affected by the outcome, my action is not wrong.
Indeed, in killing Aunt Bea the physician and I did what duty required.
This same kind of argument can be repeated in all sorts of cases,
illustrating, time after time, how the utilitarian's position leads to
results that impartial people find morally callous. It is wrong to
kill my Aunt Bea in the name of bringing about the best results for
others. A good end does not justify an evil means. Any adequate moral
theory will have to explain why this is so. Utilitarianism fails in this
respect and so cannot be the theory we seek.
What to do? Where to begin anew? The place to begin, I think, is with
the utilitarian's view of the value of the individual -- or, rather, lack
of value. In its place, suppose we consider that you and I, for example,
do have value as individuals -- what we'll call inherent value. To
say we have such value is to say that we are something more than,
something different from, mere receptacles. Moreover, to ensure that we do
not pave the way for such injustices as slavery or sexual discrimination,
we must believe that all who have inherent value have it equally,
regardless of their sex, race, religion, birthplace and so on. Similarly
to be discarded as irrelevant are one's talents or skills, intelligence
and wealth, personality or pathology, whether one is loved and admired or
despised and loathed. The genius and the retarded child, the prince and
the pauper, the brain surgeon and the fruit vendor, Mother Teresa and the
most unscrupulous used-car salesman -- all have inherent value, all
possess it equally, and all have an equal right to be treated with
respect, to be treated in ways that do not reduce them to the status of
things, as if they existed as resources for others. My value as an
individual is independent of my usefulness to you. Yours is not dependent
on your usefulness to me. For either of us to treat the other in ways that
fail to show respect for the other's independent value is to act
immorally, to violate the individual's rights.
Some of the rational virtues of this view -- what I call the rights
view -- should be evident. Unlike (crude) contractarianism, for example,
the rights view in principle denies the moral tolerability of any
and all forms of racial, sexual or social discrimination; and unlike
utilitarianism, this view in principle denies that we can justify
good results by using evil means that violate an individual's rights --
denies, for example, that it could be moral to kill my Aunt Bea to harvest
beneficial consequences for others. That would be to sanction the
disrespectful treatment of the individual in the name of the social good,
something the rights view will not -- categorically will not -- ever
allow.
The rights view, I believe, is rationally the most satisfactory moral
theory. It surpasses all other theories in the degree to which it
illuminates and explains the foundations of our duties to one another --
the domain of human morality. On this score it has the best reasons, the
best arguments, on its side. Of course, if it were possible to show that
only human beings are included within its scope, then a person like
myself, who believes in animal rights, would be obliged to look elsewhere.
But attempts to limit its scope to humans only can be shown to be
rationally defective. Animals, it is true, lack many of the abilities
humans possess. They can't read, do higher mathematics, build a bookcase
or make baba ghanoush. Neither can many human beings, however, and
yet we don't (and shouldn't) say that they (these humans) therefore have
less inherent value, less of a right to be treated with respect, than do
others. It is the similarities between those human beings who most
clearly, most non-controversially have such value (the people reading
this, for example), not our differences, that matter most. And the real
crucial, the basic similarity is simply this: we are each of us the
experiencing subject of a life, a conscious creature having an individual
welfare that has importance to us whatever our usefulness to others. We
want and prefer things, believe and feel things, recall and expect things.
And all these dimensions of our life, including our pleasure and pain, our
enjoyment and suffering, our satisfaction and frustration, our continued
existence or our untimely death -- all make a difference to the quality of
our life as lived, as experienced, by us as individuals. As the same is
true of those animals that concern us (the ones that are eaten and
trapped, for example), they too must be viewed as the experiencing
subjects of a life, with inherent value of their own.
Some there are who resist the idea that animals have inherent value.
"Only humans have such value", they profess. How might this narrow view be
defended? Shall we say that only humans have the requisite intelligence,
or autonomy, or reason? But there are many, many humans who fail to meet
these standards and yet are reasonably viewed as having value above and
beyond their usefulness to others. Shall we claim that only humans belong
to the right species, the species Homo sapiens? But this is blatant
speciesism. Will it be said, then, that all -- and only -- humans have
immortal souls? Then our opponents have their work cut out for them. I am
myself not ill-disposed to the proposition that there are immortal souls.
Personally, I profoundly hope I have one. But I would not want to rest my
position on a controversial ethical issue on the even more controversial
question about who or what has an immortal soul. That is to dig one's hole
deeper, not to climb out. Rationally, it is better to resolve moral issues
without making more controversial assumptions than are needed. The
question of who has inherent value is such a question, one that is
resolved more rationally without the introduction of the idea of immortal
souls than by its use.
Well, perhaps some will say that animals have some inherent value, only
less than we have. Once again, however, attempts to defend this view can
be shown to lack rational justification. What could be the basis of our
having more inherent value than animals? Their lack of reason, or
autonomy, or intellect? Only if we are willing to make the same judgement
in the case of humans who are similarly deficient. But it is not true that
such humans -- the retarded child, for example, or the mentally deranged
-- have less inherent value than you or I. Neither, then, can we
rationally sustain the view that animals like them in being the
experiencing subjects of a life have less inherent value. All who
have inherent value have it equally, whether they be human animals
or not.
Inherent value, then, belongs equally to those who are the experiencing
subjects of a life. Whether it belongs to others -- to rocks and rivers,
trees and glaciers, for example -- we do not know and may never know. But
neither do we need to know, if we are to make the case for animal rights.
We do not need to know, for example, how many people are eligible to vote
in the next presidential election before we can know whether I am.
Similarly, we do not need to know how many individuals have inherent value
before we can know that some do. When it comes to the case for animal
rights, then, what we need to know is whether the animals that, in our
culture, are routinely eaten, hunted and used in our laboratories, for
example, are like us in being subjects of a life. And we do know this. We
do know that many -- literally, billions and billions -- of these animals
are the subjects of a life in the sense explained and so have inherent
value if we do. And since, in order to arrive at the best theory of our
duties to one another, we must recognize our equal inherent value as
individuals, reason -- not sentiment, not emotion -- reason compels us to
recognize the equal inherent value of these animals and, with this, their
equal right to be treated with respect.
That, very roughly, is the shape and feel of the case for animal
rights. Most of the details of the supporting argument are missing. They
are to be found in the book to which I alluded earlier. Here, the details
go begging, and I must, in closing, limit myself to four final points.
The first is how the theory that underlies the case for animal rights
shows that the animal rights movement is a part of, not antagonistic to,
the human rights movement. The theory that rationally grounds the rights
of animals also grounds the rights of humans. Thus those involved in the
animal rights movement are partners in the struggle to secure respect for
human rights -- the rights of women, for example, or minorities, or
workers. The animal rights movement is cut from the same moral cloth as
these.
Second, having set out the broad outlines of the rights view, I can now
say why its implications for farming and science, among other fields, are
both clear and uncompromising. In the case of the use of animals in
science, the rights view is categorically abolitionist. Lab animals are
not our tasters; we are not their kings. Because these animals are treated
routinely, systematically as if their value were reducible to their
usefulness to others, they are routinely, systematically treated with a
lack of respect, and thus are their rights routinely, systematically
violated. This is just as true when they are used in trivial, duplicative,
unnecessary or unwise research as it is when they are used in studies that
hold out real promise of human benefits. We can't justify harming or
killing a human being (my Aunt Bea, for example) just for these sorts of
reason. Neither can we do so even in the case of so lowly a creature as a
laboratory rat. It is not just refinement or reduction that is called for,
not just larger, cleaner cages, not just more generous use of anaesthetic
or the elimination of multiple surgery, not just tidying up the system. It
is complete replacement. The best we can do when it comes to using animals
in science is -- not to use them. That is where our duty lies, according
to the rights view.
As for commercial animal agriculture, the rights view takes a similar
abolitionist position. The fundamental moral wrong here is not that
animals are kept in stressful close confinement or in isolation, or that
their pain and suffering, their needs and preferences are ignored or
discounted. All these are wrong, of course, but they are not the
fundamental wrong. They are symptoms and effects of the deeper, systematic
wrong that allows these animals to be viewed as lacking independent value,
as resources for us -- as, indeed, a renewable resource. Giving farm
animals more space, more natural environments, more companions does not
right the fundamental wrong, any more than giving lab animals more
anaesthesia or bigger, cleaner cages would right the fundamental wrong in
their case. Nothing less than the total dissolution of commercial animal
agriculture will do this, just as, for similar reasons I won't develop at
length here, morality requires nothing less than the total elimination of
hunting and trapping for commercial and sporting ends. The rights view's
implications, then, as I have said, are clear and uncompromising.
My last two points are about philosophy, my profession. It is, most
obviously, no substitute for political action. The words I have written
here and in other places by themselves don't change a thing. It is what we
do with the thoughts that the words express -- our acts, our deeds -- that
changes things. All that philosophy can do, and all I have attempted, is
to offer a vision of what our deeds should aim at. And the why. But not
the how.
Finally, I am reminded of my thoughtful critic, the one I mentioned
earlier, who chastised me for being too cerebral. Well, cerebral I have
been: indirect duty views, utilitarianism, contractarianism -- hardly the
stuff deep passions are made of. I am also reminded, however, of the image
another friend set before me -- the image of the ballerina as expressive
of disciplined passion. Long hours of sweat and toil, of loneliness and
practice, of doubt and fatigue: those are the discipline of her craft. But
the passion is there too, the fierce drive to excel, to speak through her
body, to do it right, to pierce our minds. That is the image of philosophy
I would leave with you, not "too cerebral" but disciplined passion.
Of the discipline enough has been seen. As for the passion: there are
times, and these not infrequent, when tears come to my eyes when I see, or
read, or hear of the wretched plight of animals in the hands of humans.
Their pain, their suffering, their loneliness, their innocence, their
death. Anger. Rage. Pity. Sorrow. Disgust. The whole creation groans under
the weight of the evil we humans visit upon these mute, powerless
creatures. It is our hearts, not just our heads, that call for an
end to it all, that demand of us that we overcome, for them, the habits
and forces behind their systematic oppression. All great movements, it is
written, go through three stages: ridicule, discussion, and adoption. It
is the realization of this third stage, adoption, that requires both our
passion and our discipline, our hearts and our heads. The fate of animals
is in our hands. God grant that we are equal to the task.
Borrowed from In Defense of Animals, edited by Peter Singer.
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