Sam Vaknin
October 9, 2006
According to MSNBC, in a
May 2005 Senate hearing, John Lewis, the FBI's deputy assistant
director for counterterrorism, asserted that "environmental and animal
rights extremists who have turned to arson and explosives are the
nation's top domestic terrorism threat ... Groups such as the Animal
Liberation Front, the Earth Liberation Front and the Britain-based
SHAC, or Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty, are 'way out in front' in
terms of damage and number of crimes ...". Lewis averred that " ... (t)here
is nothing else going on in this country over the last several years
that is racking up the high number of violent crimes and terrorist
actions".
MSNBC notes that "(t)he
Animal Liberation Front says on its Web site that its small,
autonomous groups of people take 'direct action' against animal abuse
by rescuing animals and causing financial loss to animal exploiters,
usually through damage and destruction of property."
"Animal rights" is a
catchphrase akin to "human rights". It involves, however, a few
pitfalls. First, animals exist only as a concept. Otherwise, they are
cuddly cats, curly dogs, cute monkeys. A rat and a puppy are both
animals but our emotional reaction to them is so different that we
cannot really lump them together. Moreover: what rights are we talking
about? The right to life? The right to be free of pain? The right to
food? Except the right to free speech all other rights could be
applied to animals.
Law professor Steven
Wise, argues in his book, "Drawing the Line: Science and the Case for
Animal Rights", for the extension to animals of legal rights accorded
to infants. Many animal species exhibit awareness, cognizance and
communication skills typical of human toddlers and of humans with
arrested development. Yet, the latter enjoy rights denied the former.
According to Wise, there
are four categories of practical autonomy - a legal standard for
granting "personhood" and the rights it entails. Practical autonomy
involves the ability to be desirous, to intend to fulfill and pursue
one's desires, a sense of self-awareness, and self-sufficiency. Most
animals, says Wise, qualify. This may be going too far. It is easier
to justify the moral rights of animals than their legal rights.
But when we say
"animals", what we really mean is non-human organisms. This is such a
wide definition that it easily pertains to extraterrestrial aliens.
Will we witness an Alien Rights movement soon? Unlikely. Thus, we are
forced to narrow our field of enquiry to non-human organisms
reminiscent of humans, the ones that provoke in us empathy.
Even this is way too
fuzzy. Many people love snakes, for instance, and deeply empathize
with them. Could we accept the assertion (avidly propounded by these
people) that snakes ought to have rights or should we consider
only organisms with extremities and the ability to feel pain?
Historically,
philosophers like Kant (and Descartes, Malebranche, and Aquinas)
rejected the idea of animal rights. They regarded animals as the
organic equivalents of machines, driven by coarse instincts, unable to
experience pain (though their behavior sometimes deceives us into
erroneously believing that they do).
Thus, any ethical
obligation that we have towards animals is a derivative of our primary
obligation towards our fellow humans (the only ones possessed of moral
significance). These are called the theories of indirect moral
obligations. Thus, it is wrong to torture animals only because it
desensitizes us to human suffering and makes us more prone to using
violence on humans. Malebranche augmented this line of thinking by
"proving" that animals cannot suffer pain because they are not
descended from Adam. Pain and suffering, as we all know, are the
exclusive outcomes of Adam's sins.
Kant and Malebranche may
have been wrong. Animals may be able to suffer and agonize. But how
can we tell whether another Being is truly suffering pain or not?
Through empathy. We postulate that - since that Being resembles us ∓
it must have the same experiences and, therefore, it deserves our
pity.
Yet, the principle of
resemblance has many drawbacks.
One, it leads to moral
relativism.
Consider this maxim from
the Jewish Talmud: "Do not do unto thy friend that which you hate". An
analysis of this sentence renders it less altruistic than it appears.
We are encouraged to refrain from doing only those things that WE find
hateful. This is the quiddity of moral relativism.
The saying implies that
it is the individual who is the source of moral authority. Each and
every one of us is allowed to spin his own moral system, independent
of others. The Talmudic dictum establishes a privileged moral club
(very similar to later day social contractarianism) comprised of
oneself and one's friend(s). One is encouraged not to visit evil upon
one's friends, all others seemingly excluded. Even the broadest
interpretation of the word "friend" could only read: "someone like
you" and substantially excludes strangers.
Two, similarity is a
structural, not an essential, trait.
Empathy as a
differentiating principle is structural: if X looks like me and
behaves like me then he is privileged. Moreover, similarity is not
necessarily identity. Monkeys, dogs and dolphins are very much like
us, both structurally and behaviorally. Even according to Wise, it is
quantity (the degree of observed resemblance), not quality (identity,
essence), that is used in determining whether an animal is worthy of
holding rights, whether is it a morally significant person. The degree
of figurative and functional likenesses decide whether one deserves to
live, pain-free and happy.
The quantitative test
includes the ability to communicate (manipulate vocal-verbal-written
symbols within structured symbol systems). Yet, we ignore the fact
that using the same symbols does not guarantee that we attach to them
the same cognitive interpretations and the same emotional resonance
('private languages"). The same words, or symbols, often have
different meanings.
Meaning is dependent upon
historical, cultural, and personal contexts. There is no telling
whether two people mean the same things when they say "red", or "sad",
or "I", or "love". That another organism looks like us, behaves like
us and communicates like us is no guarantee that it is - in its
essence - like us. This is the subject of the famous Turing Test:
there is no effective way to distinguish a machine from a human when
we rely exclusively on symbol manipulation.
Consider pain once more.
To say that something
does not experience pain cannot be rigorously defended. Pain is a
subjective experience. There is no way to prove or to disprove that
someone is or is not in pain. Here, we can rely only on the subject's
reports. Moreover, even if we were to have an analgometer (pain
gauge), there would have been no way to show that the phenomenon that
activates the meter is one and the same for all subjects,
SUBJECTIVELY, i.e., that it is experienced in the same way by all the
subjects examined.
Even more basic questions
regarding pain are impossible to answer: What is the connection
between the piercing needle and the pain REPORTED and between these
two and electrochemical patterns of activity in the brain? A
correlation between these three phenomena can be established but
not their identity or the existence of a causative process. We cannot
prove that the waves in the subject's brain when he reports pain
ARE that pain. Nor can we show that they CAUSED the pain, or that the
pain caused them.
It is also not clear
whether our moral percepts are conditioned on the objective existence
of pain, on the reported existence of pain, on the purported existence
of pain (whether experienced or not, whether reported or not), or on
some independent laws.
If it were painless,
would it be moral to torture someone? Is the very act of sticking
needles into someone immoral or is it immoral because of the pain it
causes, or supposed to inflict? Are all three components (needle
sticking, a sensation of pain, brain activity) morally equivalent? If
so, is it as immoral to merely generate the same patterns of brain
activity, without inducing any sensation of pain and without sticking
needles in the subject?
If these three phenomena
are not morally equivalent why aren't they? They are, after all,
different facets of the very same pain shouldn't we condemn all
of them equally? Or should one aspect of pain (the subject's report of
pain) be accorded a privileged treatment and status?
Yet, the subject's report
is the weakest proof of pain! It cannot be verified. And if we cling
to this descriptive-behavioural-phenomenological definition of pain
than animals qualify as well. They also exhibit all the behaviours
normally ascribed to humans in pain and they report feeling pain
(though they do tend to use a more limited and non-verbal vocabulary).
Pain is, therefore, a
value judgment and the reaction to it is culturally dependent. In some
cases, pain is perceived as positive and is sought. In the Aztec
cultures, being chosen to be sacrificed to the Gods was a high honour.
How would we judge animal rights in such historical and cultural
contexts? Are there any "universal" values or does it all really
depend on interpretation?
If we, humans, cannot
separate the objective from the subjective and the cultural what
gives us the right or ability to decide for other organisms? We have
no way of knowing whether pigs suffer pain. We cannot decide right and
wrong, good and evil for those with whom we can communicate, let alone
for organisms with which we fail to do even this.
Is it GENERALLY immoral
to kill, to torture, to pain? The answer seems obvious and it
automatically applies to animals. Is it generally immoral to destroy?
Yes, it is and this answer pertains to the inanimate as well. There
are exceptions: it is permissible to kill and to inflict pain in order
to prevent a (quantitatively or qualitatively) greater evil, to
protect life, and when no reasonable and feasible alternative is
available.
The chain of food in
nature is morally neutral and so are death and disease. Any act which
is intended to sustain life of a higher order (and a higher order in
life) is morally positive or, at least neutral. Nature decreed
so. Animals do it to other animals though, admittedly, they
optimize their consumption and avoid waste and unnecessary pain. Waste
and pain are morally wrong. This is not a question of hierarchy of
more or less important Beings (an outcome of the fallacy of
anthropomorphesizing Nature).
The distinction between
what is (essentially) US and what just looks and behaves like us
(but is NOT us) is false, superfluous and superficial. Sociobiology is
already blurring these lines. Quantum Mechanics has taught us that we
can say nothing about what the world really IS. If things look the
same and behave the same, we better assume that they are the same.
The attempt to claim that
moral responsibility is reserved to the human species is self
defeating. If it is so, then we definitely have a moral obligation
towards the weaker and meeker. If it isn't, what right do we have to
decide who shall live and who shall die (in pain)?
The increasingly shaky
"fact" that species do not interbreed "proves" that species are
distinct, say some. But who can deny that we share most of our genetic
material with the fly and the mouse? We are not as dissimilar as we
wish we were. And ever-escalating cruelty towards other species will
not establish our genetic supremacy - merely our moral inferiority.
Sam Vaknin (samvak.tripod.com)
is the author of
Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited (samvak.tripod.com/thebook.html)and other books.He
served as a columnist for online publications such as Central Europe
Review, Global Politician, PopMatters, United Press International
(UPI) (as Senior Business Correspondent), editor in The Open Directory
and Suite101 and, until recently, the Economic Advisor to the
Government of Macedonia.