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Editorial Vol.8(1)

机译:Vol.8编辑(1)

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Do you remember Harambe, the 17-year-old silverback who was shot dead after a boy fell into the gorilla enclosure at the Cincinnati Zoo, Cecil, the lion who was shot with an arrow by an American dentist in Zimbabwe, and Marius, the giraffe who was killed and fed to other animals at the Copenhagen Zoo?Every once in a while, a news story about the human-caused death of an animal sparks global outrage, briefly lights up the comments sections on the internet, and reminds us of the inconsistency in how think about non-human animals. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, we kill approximately two thousand animals for food per second, not including fish and other marine animals. All of these animals have rich emotional lives that matter to them, and what we do to them is as bad, and often much worse, than what was done to Harambe, Cecil, and Marius. Most farm animals are raised in filthy and unnatural conditions, and are subject to routine mutilations and other mistreatment. They are transported in ways that are at best unpleasant and at worst horrific, and they die violent deaths. Yet, most of us while expressing our moral indignation about the treatment of Harambe, Cecil, and Marius rarely spare a thought for the animals we eat.Morally speaking, there does not seem to be much of a difference between what happened in Cincinnati, Zimbabwe, and Denmark and what happens in factory farms and slaughterhouses in every part of the world, every day. If anything, there was a better reason to kill Harambe namely, to avert danger from a child than there is to kill animals for food. We do not need to consume animal products to live a healthy and fulfilled life. In fact, careful studies have found that a well-balanced plant-based diet decreases the chances of suffering from diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and some cancers, and benefits the environment.The way we think about and treat non-human animals is deeply confused, and scholars are in a unique position to provide some clarity. The Bangladesh Journal of Bioethics hence decided to dedicate two special issues to the relationship between human beings and other animals, and asked me to be the guest editor. This is the second of the two special issues, and contains the following five articles:The number of fish killed annually by the fishing industry, even on the most conservative estimate, is more than ten times larger than the number of terrestrial animals killed annually for food, and yet animal advocates largely focus on the latter in their efforts to reduce animal suffering. Bob Fischer (Wild Fish and Expected Utility) does the math and argues that considerations of expected utility call that focus into question. He concludes that animal advocacy organizations owe an explanation of why they are not directing more of their resources to fish.Akande Michael Aina and Ofuasia Emmanuel (The Chicken Fallacy and the Ethics of Cruelty to Non-Human Animals) challenge the common view that non-human animals are mere resources that we can use as we please, and ask whether Peter Singers ethics of animal liberation is a plausible alternative. They think it is not, in part because it denies moral status to non-sentient life, and take another approach that draws from Charles Darwins theory of evolution. They argue that cruelty to non-human animals, with whom they claim we are on an equal moral footing, betrays our trusting and neighborly relationship with them.Iván Ortega Rodríguez (Animal Citizenship, Phenomenology, and Ontology: Some reflections on Donaldsons & Kymlickas Zoopolis) provides a brief summary of the position Sue Donaldson and Will Kymlicka defend in their ground-breaking book Zoopolis, and argues that they are mistaken in failing to consider an important metaphysical difference between human beings and other animals. While human and non-human animals share a common environment, only human interaction constitutes what he calls a world.
机译:你还记得Harambe,17岁的Silverback在一个男孩落入辛辛那提动物园,塞西尔的辛辛那亚州塞西尔,狮子队被津巴布韦的美国牙医和马里乌斯拍摄的狮子射入大猩猩被杀和喂养到哥本哈根动物园的其他动物的长颈鹿?每次偶尔,关于人类导致动物死亡的新闻故事都会引发全球愤怒,揭示互联网上的评论部分,并提醒我们如何思考非人类动物的不一致。根据联合国的食品和农业组织,我们每秒杀死大约两千只动物,不包括鱼和其他海洋动物。所有这些动物都有丰富的情感生活,重要的是,我们对他们所做的事情也是糟糕的,而且往往比对Harambe,Cecil和Marius所做的更糟糕。大多数农场动物在肮脏和不自然的条件下提出,并且受常规肢体和其他虐待。它们以最令人不快的方式运输,并且在最糟糕的可怕之中,他们死亡。然而,我们大多数人同时表达了对Harambe,Cecil和Marius的待遇的道德愤慨,很少有人对我们吃的动物的思想来说。辛辛那提,津巴布韦发生的事情似乎没有太大的区别,丹麦以及在世界各地的工厂农场和屠宰场中发生了什么,每天都在世界各地。如果有的话,有一个更好的理由杀死Harambe,以避免孩子的危险,而不是杀死动物的食物。我们不需要消耗动物产品,以实现健康和充实的生活。事实上,仔细研究发现,均衡的植物饮食降低了患有糖尿病,心脏病,中风和一些癌症等疾病的机会,并利益。我们思考和治疗非人类动物深入混乱,学者们处于独特的地位,以提供一些清晰度。孟加拉国的生物伦理学杂志决定为人类和其他动物之间的关系献上两个特殊问题,并让我成为访客编辑。这是两项特殊问题的第二个,并包含以下五篇文章:捕鱼行业每年杀死的鱼数,即使是最保守的估计,比每年遇到的陆地动物数量大十倍以上食物,而且动物倡导者在很大程度上关注后者,以减少动物痛苦的努力。 Bob Fischer(野生鱼类和预期效用)做了数学,并认为预期的实用程序呼叫的考虑集中在问题上。他得出结论,动物倡导组织欠了一个解释,为什么他们没有将更多资源指导到钓鱼.Akande迈克尔Aina和Ofuasia Emmanuel(鸡谬误和非人动物的恐怖伦理)挑战非凡的观点人类的动物只是我们可以在我们的资源中使用的资源,并询问彼得歌手的歌手伦理是否是一种合理的替代品。他们认为它不是部分原因是它否认道德地位对非感知生活,采取另一种方法从查尔斯达尔文的演变理论中汲取。他们认为,与他们声称的非人类动物的残酷,与他们在一起,我们与他们的信任和睦邻关系.ivánortegarodríguez(动物公民身份,现象学和本体论:一些关于唐纳斯顿&kymlickas zoopolis的思考)提供了Sue Donaldson的第一个简要摘要,并将kymlicka捍卫他们的地下书籍动物区,并认为它们被误认为未考虑人类和其他动物之间的重要形而上学差异。虽然人类和非人动物分享普通环境,但只有人类的互动构成他所谓的世界。

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