Question for you: would it be morally good to factory farm permanently and severely cognitively impaired human orphans, assuming a) the conditions that matter to you are met (e.g. their lives are net positive, they’ve been “successfully bred to tolerate their conditions”) and b) there are no negative externalities (e.g. the rest of society isn’t upset or scared by this factory farming)?
The main points for ethical veganism as I understand it are:
1. Killing other animals is unjust aggression; you wouldn’t like to be killed and eaten, so don’t kill and eat them.
Veganism (and, relatedly, taking animal ethics seriously) isn’t about not killing or eating animals; it’s about not exploiting (non-consensually using) and inflicting suffering on them if you can avoid it. The golden rule is probably why.
2. Factory farming causes animals to have bad lives.
Veganism (and taking animal ethics seriously) is about all forms of animal exploitation, not just factory farming.
If you’re really worried about reducing the number of animal life years
This isn’t what vegans and animal ethicists are worried about. We’re worried about harm (maybe suffering, maybe exploitation, maybe rights violations) being done to sentient beings, unnecessarily.
they [animals] can’t make or honor agreements, or intentionally retaliate based on understanding our choices
Neither can many humans, including infants and adults with severe dementia.
Declaring a group’s existence repugnant and acting to end it is unambiguously a form of intergroup aggression.
I don’t this is a helpful framing. Where does it leave enslaved humans?
I’m not arguing here that domesticates’ preference to exist outweighs your aesthetic revulsion
Is the revulsion moral, or aesthetic, or both?
If factory farming seems like a bad thing, you should do something about the version happening to you first.
Your hypothetical seems to be anticipating an argument that farming mentally disabled humans would be repugnant even with slightly net-positive lives, so that therefore something similar must apply to animals. Let’s consider a concrete case: Someone hires a mentally disabled person to provide warmth to their blanket-averse toddler at night, instead of the ‘vegetarian’ solution of turning up the heat (or ‘vegan’ if fossil fuels aren’t involved). If they don’t worry much about their employee’s other living conditions as long as they seem willing to perform the service, we might say there’s room for improvement but not that they’re doing anything particularly wrong.
Consider another concrete case, closer to home for me. My aunt had Down syndrome. From the way my father talked about it, I didn’t realize until my teenage years that Down syndrome isn’t usually fatal in early childhood. The state advised my grandparents that it would be better for the family if they sent her to an institution, where she died of pneumonia (i.e. neglect) a couple years later. It seems like it would’ve been better for everyone involved if she’d been allowed to live until 20, and then some rich person had bought her organs.
You might object that efficient farming is different from neglectful institutionalization. But my landlord works in an Amazon warehouse, spending much of his waking time having value extracted from his labor at maximum efficiency, which can be seriously physically depleting work, and he seems to be pretty cheerful and happy with his life. Or consider Foxconn, where they installed nets to prevent worker suicides—arguably worse conditions than many factory farms—yet we all use smartphones.
This isn’t about catching ethical vegans in hypocrisy—it demonstrates that we can’t solve these problems by drawing bright moral lines around ‘exploitation’ or ‘farming.’ We have to consciously engage with complex trade-offs to get the goods we need while improving conditions where we can. The horror at ‘farming humans’ seems more about aesthetic revulsion at the framing than actual welfare—when we call similar value extraction ‘employment’ it becomes acceptable.
There are principal-agent problems here—if the person is mistreated enough in their off hours, they might not be a safe cuddle buddy for a toddler. These are real decision-theoretic concerns. But these problems are much less applicable to factory farming.
Again, my question: do you think that non-consensually farming cognitively impaired humans for their flesh/secretions, given net-positive lives and no negative externalities, would be morally justifiable (or good)?
I think we shouldn’t exploit any sentient beings (i.e. use them as a means to an end without their consent), regardless of their species or substrate. I’m not sure whether this is because I believe exploitation is intrinsically morally wrong, or whether it’s because I think it’s a helpful proxy for suffering (something I do think is intrinsically morally bad, at least suffering beyond a certain threshold).
Do you disagree—either with my definition of exploitation, or with my normative claim that we shouldn’t exploit sentient beings?
Question for you: would it be morally good to factory farm permanently and severely cognitively impaired human orphans, assuming a) the conditions that matter to you are met (e.g. their lives are net positive, they’ve been “successfully bred to tolerate their conditions”) and b) there are no negative externalities (e.g. the rest of society isn’t upset or scared by this factory farming)?
Veganism (and, relatedly, taking animal ethics seriously) isn’t about not killing or eating animals; it’s about not exploiting (non-consensually using) and inflicting suffering on them if you can avoid it. The golden rule is probably why.
Veganism (and taking animal ethics seriously) is about all forms of animal exploitation, not just factory farming.
This isn’t what vegans and animal ethicists are worried about. We’re worried about harm (maybe suffering, maybe exploitation, maybe rights violations) being done to sentient beings, unnecessarily.
Neither can many humans, including infants and adults with severe dementia.
I don’t this is a helpful framing. Where does it leave enslaved humans?
Is the revulsion moral, or aesthetic, or both?
This is what factory farming looks like: www.watchdominion.com
If this is a measure of badness, you should explain why.
www.watchdominion.com
Your hypothetical seems to be anticipating an argument that farming mentally disabled humans would be repugnant even with slightly net-positive lives, so that therefore something similar must apply to animals. Let’s consider a concrete case: Someone hires a mentally disabled person to provide warmth to their blanket-averse toddler at night, instead of the ‘vegetarian’ solution of turning up the heat (or ‘vegan’ if fossil fuels aren’t involved). If they don’t worry much about their employee’s other living conditions as long as they seem willing to perform the service, we might say there’s room for improvement but not that they’re doing anything particularly wrong.
Consider another concrete case, closer to home for me. My aunt had Down syndrome. From the way my father talked about it, I didn’t realize until my teenage years that Down syndrome isn’t usually fatal in early childhood. The state advised my grandparents that it would be better for the family if they sent her to an institution, where she died of pneumonia (i.e. neglect) a couple years later. It seems like it would’ve been better for everyone involved if she’d been allowed to live until 20, and then some rich person had bought her organs.
You might object that efficient farming is different from neglectful institutionalization. But my landlord works in an Amazon warehouse, spending much of his waking time having value extracted from his labor at maximum efficiency, which can be seriously physically depleting work, and he seems to be pretty cheerful and happy with his life. Or consider Foxconn, where they installed nets to prevent worker suicides—arguably worse conditions than many factory farms—yet we all use smartphones.
This isn’t about catching ethical vegans in hypocrisy—it demonstrates that we can’t solve these problems by drawing bright moral lines around ‘exploitation’ or ‘farming.’ We have to consciously engage with complex trade-offs to get the goods we need while improving conditions where we can. The horror at ‘farming humans’ seems more about aesthetic revulsion at the framing than actual welfare—when we call similar value extraction ‘employment’ it becomes acceptable.
There are principal-agent problems here—if the person is mistreated enough in their off hours, they might not be a safe cuddle buddy for a toddler. These are real decision-theoretic concerns. But these problems are much less applicable to factory farming.
Again, my question: do you think that non-consensually farming cognitively impaired humans for their flesh/secretions, given net-positive lives and no negative externalities, would be morally justifiable (or good)?
I think we shouldn’t exploit any sentient beings (i.e. use them as a means to an end without their consent), regardless of their species or substrate. I’m not sure whether this is because I believe exploitation is intrinsically morally wrong, or whether it’s because I think it’s a helpful proxy for suffering (something I do think is intrinsically morally bad, at least suffering beyond a certain threshold).
Do you disagree—either with my definition of exploitation, or with my normative claim that we shouldn’t exploit sentient beings?