Abstract

AbstractRats are often despised. In what way does such aversion affect moral deliberation, and if so, how should we accommodate any distorting effects on our normative judgements? These questions are explored in this chapter with regard to recent proposals in (1) the ethics of pest management and (2) animal political theory. While ethical frameworks and tools used in the context of animal research can improve moral deliberation with regard to pest management, we argue based on psychological factors regarding the perception of rats that before implementing these methods in either animal research or pest management, one needs to ascertain that rats are owed genuine moral consideration. With regard to animal political theory, we identify three issues: truth-aptness, perception, and moral motivation. To complement as well as address some of the issues found in both animal research ethics and animal political theory, we explore compassion. Starting from compassion, we develop a pragmatist and interspecies understanding of morality, including a shift from an anthropocentric to a multispecies epistemology, and a distributed rather than an individual notion of moral agency. We need to engage with the experience of others, including rats and those who perceive these animals as pests, as well as pay attention to the specific way individual agents are embedded in particular socio-ecological settings so as to promote compassionate action.

Highlights

  • Amidst human-dominated landscapes rats, both the brown (Rattus norvegicus) and black rat (Rattus rattus) are found in abundance

  • Despite the aversion that colors the way in which humans generally perceive rats, we need to take them seriously in our moral deliberations and actions. We explore this tension between moral consideration and adverse perception by looking at recent work in moral and political theory, starting with (1) proposals to extrapolate the methodology of ethical assessment of animal research to the field of pest management, to (2) look at the political turn in animals ethics

  • As long as we restrict ourselves to situations where the interests of liminal animals and humans conflict, the model of ethical assessment used in animals research could work; assuming that the aforementioned concerns about animal research ethics itself have been successfully addressed

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Summary

Nieuwland (B)

He has gnawed; Of his wisdom, of his fraud What dost thou know In the wretched little beast Is life & heart Child & parent Not without relation To fruitful field & sun & moon What art thou? His wicked cruelty Is cruel to thy cruelty He has gnawed; Of his wisdom, of his fraud What dost thou know In the wretched little beast Is life & heart Child & parent Not without relation To fruitful field & sun & moon What art thou? His wicked cruelty Is cruel to thy cruelty

17.1 Introduction
17.2 From the Lab to the Liminal
17.3 How Fear and Disgust Impair Moral Judgment
17.4 Rat Politics
17.5 Failure of Imagination
17.6 Sympathy for the Rat
17.7 Compassion: A Stepping Stone?
17.8 Compassion
17.9 From Anthropocentric to Multispecies Epistemologies
17.10 From Philosophical Deliberation to Compassionate Engagement
17.11 Conclusion
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