Author
|
Topic: Animal Rights-why is it necessary?
|
rajji Knowflake Posts: 1362 From: Registered: Jan 2011
|
posted April 05, 2014 03:39 AM
Why should animals have rights?In his book Animal Liberation, Peter Singer states that the basic principle of equality does not require equal or identical treatment; it requires equal consideration. This is an important distinction when talking about animal rights. People often ask if animals should have rights, and quite simply, the answer is “Yes!” Animals surely deserve to live their lives free from suffering and exploitation. Jeremy Bentham, the founder of the reforming utilitarian school of moral philosophy, stated that when deciding on a being’s rights, “The question is not ‘Can they reason?’ nor ‘Can they talk?’ but ‘Can they suffer?’” In that passage, Bentham points to the capacity for suffering as the vital characteristic that gives a being the right to equal consideration. The capacity for suffering is not just another characteristic like the capacity for language or higher mathematics. All animals have the ability to suffer in the same way and to the same degree that humans do. They feel pain, pleasure, fear, frustration, loneliness, and motherly love. Whenever we consider doing something that would interfere with their needs, we are morally obligated to take them into account.
IP: Logged |
rajji Knowflake Posts: 1362 From: Registered: Jan 2011
|
posted April 05, 2014 03:41 AM
Supporters of animal rights believe that animals have an inherent worth—a value completely separate from their usefulness to humans. We believe that every creature with a will to live has a right to live free from pain and suffering. Animal rights is not just a philosophy—it is a social movement that challenges society’s traditional view that all nonhuman animals exist solely for human use. As PETA founder Ingrid Newkirk has said, “When it comes to pain, love, joy, loneliness, and fear, a rat is a pig is a dog is a boy. Each one values his or her life and fights the knife.”Only prejudice allows us to deny others the rights that we expect to have for ourselves. Whether it’s based on race, gender, sexual orientation, or species, prejudice is morally unacceptable. If you wouldn’t eat a dog, why eat a pig? Dogs and pigs have the same capacity to feel pain, but it is prejudice based on species that allows us to think of one animal as a companion and the other as dinner. source- http://www.peta.org/about-peta/why-peta/why-animal-rights/
IP: Logged |
Ayelet Knowflake Posts: 133 From: Registered: Sep 2010
|
posted April 05, 2014 03:25 PM
I am all for animal rights, but i don't really think anyone here will do otherwise. As for the dog and pig, of course they both have the same capacity to feel pain. I think that people cannot eat an animal they actively love or cannot stand. A dog is a companion and gives a lot of love, and even those who don't fight for animals rights cannot avoid sensing that, so their love makes it horrible for them to eat dogs. Yet there are places where dogs are eaten. A person will also not eat an animal he\she finds repulsive. A strong emotion is the key. But we should feel compassion toward all creatures and feel a strong compassion for creatures we otherwise have nothing to do with.IP: Logged |
Scorpiocat Knowflake Posts: 41 From: Canada Registered: Mar 2014
|
posted April 10, 2014 09:09 PM
As an avid animal lover, I've been a vegetarian for more than 25 years, I can't stand the thought of eating any animals. I have a friend who claims to love animals, she's a dog breeder, but also lives on a cattle ranch. I have issues with dog breeders when there are so many unwanted dogs in shelters. Rather than breed animals, they should all be spayed and neutered. IP: Logged | |