Speciesism Flashcards
How does Singer define speciesism?
a prejudice in favour of the interests of members of one species against those members of other species
Singer’s argument Standard Form
- Humans have moral value
- There is no feature held by all humans to greater degree than non-humans
- If there is no feature held by all humans to greater degree than non-humans then species is a morally arbitrary attribute
- ## If species is a morally arbitrary attribute we need to extend the same basic moral principle (PEC) to members of all speciesC: we need it extend moral value to non-human animals
What is the PEC
Principle of equal consideration of interests
What are the marginal cases?
- babies
- cognitive impairments
- dementia ect
What are the 3 flaws Kagan presents in Singer’s argument?
- speciesism is not a prejudice
- pain duration and intensity are not the only morally relevant features
- sentientism vs speciesism and intuition
What is the case used by Kagan to explain that intensity and duration are not the only morally relevant feature of pain?
The criminal and the falsely accused
sentientism vs speciesism
- Singer draws a line between sentient and non sentient
- based on intuition - the speciesist draws a line between human and non-human
- based on intuition
singer uses intuition for 1 but says it is prejudiced to do so in 2
What is Kagan’s definition of prejudice?
What argument stems from this
a prejudice is something based on evidence that one would not normally find adequate
the division between species is based on intuition - speciesism is not a prejudice - Singer’s argument fails!!!
Explain modal personism
Kagan
Person: a rational, self-conscious being aware of itself as one among others, extended through time
3 problem groups…
- non-persons who will become persons
- humans who were persons but are no longer
- humans who are not and never will be persons
What gives a person rights is a metaphysical fact: being MODAL PERSON - someone who could have been a person
- being part of a person species is a sufficient but not necessary condition for higher moral status