| 10 Reasons FOR
Animal Rights and Their Explanation |
10 Reasons AGAINST Animal Rights and Their Replies |
1. Rational
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1. Equating animals and humans
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THE PHILOSOPHY OF ANIMAL RIGHTSThe other animals humans eat, use in science, hunt, trap, and exploit in a variety of ways, have a life of their own that is of importance to them apart from their utility to us. They are not only in the world, they are aware of it. What happens to them matters to them. Each has a life that fares better or worse for the one whose life it is.That life includes a variety of biological, individual, and social needs. The satisfaction of these needs is a source of pleasure, their frustration or abuse, a source of pain. In these fundamental ways, the nonhuman animals in labs and on farms, for example, are the same as human beings. And so it is that the ethics of our dealings with them, and with one another, must acknowledge the same fundamental moral principles. At its deepest level, human ethics is based on the independent value of the individual: The moral worth of any one human being is not to be measured by how useful that person is in advancing the interest of other human beings. To treat human beings in ways that do not honor their independent value is to violate that most basic of human rights: the right of each person to be treated with respect. The philosophy of animal rights demands only that logic be respected. For any argument that plausibly explains the independent value of human beings implies that other animals have this same value, and have it equally. And any argument that plausibly explains the right of humans to be treated with respect, also implies that these other animals have this same right, and have it equally, too. It is true, therefore, that women do not exist to serve men, blacks to serve whites, the poor to serve the rich, or the weak to serve the strong. The philosophy of animal rights not only accepts these truths, it insists upon and justifies them. But this philosophy goes further. By insisting upon and justifying the independent value and rights of other animals, it gives scientifically informed and morally impartial reasons for denying that these animals exist to serve us. Once this truth is acknowledged, it is easy to understand why the philosophy of animal rights is uncompromising in its response to each and every injustice other animals are made to suffer. It is not larger, cleaner cages that justice demands in the case of animals used in science, for example, but empty cages: not "traditional" animal agriculture, but a complete end to all commerce in the flesh of dead animals; not "more humane" hunting and trapping, but the total eradication of these barbarous practices. For when an injustice is absolute, one must oppose it absolutely. It was not "reformed" slavery that justice demanded, not "re- formed" child labor, not "reformed" subjugation of women. In each of these cases, abolition was the only moral answer. Merely to reform injustice is to prolong injustice. The philosophy of animal rights demands this same answer-- abolition--in response to the unjust exploitation of other animals. It is not the details of unjust exploitation that must be changed. It is the unjust exploitation itself that must be ended, whether on the farm, in the lab, or among the wild, for example. The philosophy of animal rights asks for nothing more, but neither will it be satisfied with anything less. |
2. The philosophy of animal rights is scientific |
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"There is no fundamental difference between humans and the higher mammals in their mental faculties" -- Charles Darwin |
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3. The philosophy of animal rights is unprejudiced |
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"If you can justify killing to eat meat, you can justify the conditions of the ghetto. I cannot justify either one." -- Dick Gregory |
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4. The philosophy of animal rights is just |
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"The reasons for legal intervention in favor of children apply not less strongly to the case of those unfortunate slaves -- the (other) animals" - John Stuart Mill |
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5. The philosophy of animal rights is compassionate |
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"Compassion in action may be the glorious possibility that could protect our crowded, polluted planet ..." -- Victoria Moran |
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6. The philosophy of animal rights is unselfish |
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"We need a moral philosophy in which the concept of love, so rarely mentioned now by philosophers, can once again be made central." -- Iris Murdoch |
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7. The philosophy of animal rights is individually fulfilling |
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"Humaneness is not a dead external precept, but a living impulse from within; not self-sacrifice, but self-fulfillment." -- Henry Salt |
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8. The philosophy of animal rights is socially progressive. |
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"The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be measured by the way its animals are treated." -- Mahatma Gandhi |
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9. The philosophy of animal rights is environmentally wise. |
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"Until we establish a felt sense of kinship between our own species and those fellow mortals who share with us the sun and shadow of life on this agonized planet, there is no hope for other species, there is no hope for the environment, and there is no hope for ourselves." -- Jon Wynne-Tyson |
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10. The philosophy of animal rights is peace-loving. |
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"If by some miracle in all our struggle the earth is spared from nuclear holocaust, only justice to every living thing will save humankind." -- Alice Walker |
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1. You are equating animals and humans, when, in fact, humans and animals differ greatly. |
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"All the arguments to prove man's superiority cannot shatter this hard fact: in suffering, the animals are our equals." -- Peter Singer |
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2. You are saying that every human and every other animal has the same rights, which is absurd. Chickens cannot have the right to vote, nor can pigs have a right to higher education. |
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"It is the fate of every truth to be an object of ridicule when it is first acclaimed." -- Albert Schweitzer |
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3. If animals have rights, then so do vegetables, which is absurd. |
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"The case for animal rights depends only on the need for sentiency." -- Andrew Linzey |
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4. Where do you draw the line? If primates and rodents have rights, then so do slugs and amoebas, which is absurd. |
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"In the relations of humans with the animals, with the flowers, with all the objects of creation, there is a whole great ethic scarcely seen as yet." -- Victor Hugo |
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5. But surely there are some animals who can experience pain but lack a unified psychological identity. Since these animals do not have a right to be treated with respect, the philosophy of animal rights implies that we can treat them in any way we choose. |
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"The question is not, 'Can they reason?' nor 'Can they talk?' but 'Can they suffer?" -- Jeremy Bentham |
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6. Animals don't respect our rights. Therefore, humans have no obligation to respect their rights either. |
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"The time will come when people such as I will look upon the murder of (other) animals as they no look upon the murder of human beings." -- Leonardo Da Vinci |
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7. God gave humans dominion over other animals. This is why we can do anything to them that we wish, including eat them. |
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"And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat." -- Genesis 1:29 |
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8. Only humans have immortal souls. This gives us the right to treat the other animals as we wish. |
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"There is no religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like about their religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to other animals as well as humans, it is all a sham." -- Anna Sewell |
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9. If we respect the rights of animals, and do not eat or exploit them in other ways, then what are we supposed to do with all of them? In a very short time they will be running through our streets and homes. |
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"The worst sin toward our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them. That is the essence of inhumanity" -- George Bernard Shaw |
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10. Even if other animals do have moral rights and should be protected, there are more important things that need our attention -- world hunger and child abuse, for example, apartheid, drugs, violence to women, and the plight of the homeless. After we take care of these problems, then we can worry about animals rights. |
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"I am in favor of animal rights as well as human rights. That is the way of a whole human being." -- Abraham Lincoln |
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