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Singer's Argument for Animal Rights: Turning Speciesism on Its Head, Study notes of Reasoning

In this document, Peter Singer explores the concept of animal rights through the lens of women's rights. He uses Taylor's argument against Wollencraft's defense of women's rights to make a case for animal rights. Singer argues that if we examine the basis of our opposition to discrimination on the grounds of race, sex, and species, we will see that speciesism is no more morally defensible than racism or sexism. The document delves into the moral relevance of suffering and the capacity to feel pain and pleasure, and how it applies to animals and humans.

What you will learn

  • What is Peter Singer's argument for animal rights based on?
  • How does Singer use Taylor's argument against Wollencraft to make a case for animal rights?
  • What is the moral relevance of suffering and the capacity to feel pain and pleasure in the context of animal rights?
  • What are the implications of recognizing animal moral rights?
  • Why does Singer argue that speciesism is no more morally defensible than racism or sexism?

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/27/2022

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All Animals are Equal
Peter Singer
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Download Singer's Argument for Animal Rights: Turning Speciesism on Its Head and more Study notes Reasoning in PDF only on Docsity!

All Animals are Equal

Peter Singer

Peter Singer:

uProf. at Princeton and Univ. of Melbourne uAuthor of Animal Liberation , 1 st major work on “animal rights” uApplies utilitarian principles to current moral issues uAlso argues that rich societies are morally obligated to help poorer ones. u The Life You Can Save most recent book

Taylor’s “Refutation” of an

Argument for Women’s Rights

    1. Taylor claims that Mary Wollencraft’s argument (in 1792) that women have rights applies to animals (“ brutes ”) as well as to women.
      • Because the principles Wollencraft appeals to, if true, apply to animals as well as to women.
    1. But, says Taylor, it is absurd to think that animals have rights.
    1. So, Taylor concludes, Wollencraft’s argument fails to show that women have rights.

Taylor’s Reasoning

  • Since the same principles that Wollencraft uses to argue that women have rights also apply to animals, the argument, if successful, must show that both women and animals have moral rights.
  • But, Taylor believes, it is absurd to think that mere animals (“brutes”) have moral rights.
  • So, Taylor concludes, Wollencraft’s argument that women have moral rights fails with respect to women because it obviously fails with respect to animals.

Singer’s Reasoning

  • Singer agrees with Taylor that the principles Wollencraft uses to argue for women’s rights apply equally to animals.
  • But, Singer believes, Wollencraft’s arguments successfully shows that women do have moral rights.
  • Consequently, Singer reasons, Wollencraft’s argument (or an extension of it) can also be used to show that animals have moral rights. - This turns Taylor’s argument on its head.

Singer’s Claim:

  • “… if we examine more deeply the basis on which our opposition to discrimination on the grounds of race or sex ultimately rests, we will see that we would be on shaky ground if we were to demand equality for blacks and women, and other groups of oppressed humans while denying equal consideration to non- humans .”

Racism and Sexism

  • What makes racism and sexism morally wrong?
  • According to Singer (and others), these practices are morally wrong because they unfairly give advantages to one group (one race or one gender) where there are no morally relevant differences.
  • Does the same apply to “speciesism?”

Is Speciesism Morally Wrong?

  • “Speciesism” involves giving preference to one’s own species over the interests of other species.
  • Speciesism would be morally wrong if it unfairly gave preference to one’s own species where there are no morally relevant differences between human and animals with regard to having moral rights.
  • So, what properties are morally relevant?

“Can they suffer?”

  • Bentham claims that a thing merits moral consideration if it has the capacity to suffer.
  • This is implicit in the core principle of utilitarianism: - “ ...actions are right in proportion as they tend to produce happiness, wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness. By happiness is intended pleasure and the absence of pain....
  • So, on this principle, what matters for meriting moral consideration is whether something can feel pain and pleasure.

“ Each to count for one and

none for more than one. ”

Jeremy Bentham

In other words, the interests of every being affected by an action are to be taken into account and given the same weight as the like interests of any other being. ” -- Singer

Do Animals Suffer?

  • Some say no—because we have no direct evidence that they have conscious states of any kind.
  • If animals can’t feel pleasure or pain, they have no interests for us to consider.
  • But we have no direct evidence that other humans beings have conscious states either.
  • So, our evidence of animal suffering is no worse than our evidence of (other) human suffering.

Animal Suffering—Buster humiliated!

Singer’s Response:

  • It is simply false that all men are created equal. - “ The principle of the equality of human beings is not a description of an alleged actual equality among humans: it is a prescription of how we should treat human beings .”
  • So, the demand for equal treatment doesn’t presuppose the “actual equality” of all animals any more than it does of all human beings.

Another Objection:

  • Some say that to have rights, a thing must
    • “be autonomous” (or);
    • “be a member of a community” (or);
    • “have the ability to respect the rights of others.”
  • But animals don’t have these properties.
  • So, animals cannot have rights.