Frontiers of Philosophy in China >
The Ethics of Treating Animals as Resources: A Post-Heideggerian Approach
Published date: 15 Sep 2016
Copyright
This paper describes the phenomenological ethics implicit in Heidegger’s later work. It is argued that these phenomenological ethics take the form of a perfectionist ethics in which one consciously resists the temptation to nihilistically enframe other entities as Bestand. Despite Heidegger’s reputation as an inferior animal philosopher, it is then argued that we can employ this ethics to improve our relationship with non-human animals. Specifically, our use of them in the agricultural setting is examined to determine whether or not our current practices are ethical according to Heidegger’s normative model. Ultimately it is concluded that, more often than not, animals are harmed both ontically and ontologically by our modern farming practices. We are called on instead to try to dwell meditatively with other entities, to be-with them in such a way that respects them as inexhaustibly meaningful instantiations of being as such. This requires changes to the way in which we satisfy our needs as consumers.
Key words: Heidegger; ethics; phenomenology; animals; resources
Tara Kennedy . The Ethics of Treating Animals as Resources: A Post-Heideggerian Approach[J]. Frontiers of Philosophy in China, 2016 , 11(3) : 463 -482 . DOI: 10.3868/s030-005-016-0033-9
/
〈 | 〉 |