普里莫·列维作品中的动物与动物性作者:达米亚诺Benvegnù(回顾)

Elena Past
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引用次数: 0

摘要

侵犯典型人的自主性是错误的,侵犯非人类动物的自主性也是错误的。这种观点的问题在于,不同类型的自主权可能会受到威胁。侵犯范式人格自主性的错误通常可以用以下事实来解释:我们是自我意识的,能够进行抽象思维(包括语言使用),能够有意地选择我们想要的生活方式(例如,与个人道德的长期项目或计划有关)。有人可能会说,因为非人类动物没有能力行使这种自主权,因此它们不会因侵犯这种自主权而受到伤害。这本书的一些作者削弱了这一假设,指出(除其他外)非人类动物有四处走动和做被限制或控制所阻碍的事情的欲望,这些欲望构成了一种代理形式,并且(根据先前的学术研究)非人类动物拥有某种形式的自我意识。具体来说,valsamry Giroux和Carl Saucier-Bouffard、Lori Gruen和Carlos Naconecy的章节考虑了这些论点。Naconecy引用了David DeGrazia(2009)对动物自我意识的分析。虽然这个问题值得更多的讨论,但似乎非人类动物的自主性和自我意识,即使被承认,与典型的人所拥有的自主性和自我意识是不同的。具体来说,(大多数)非人类动物不会因为自己的偏好被推翻而感到委屈,因为它们不是那种能够抽象地认为自己是自主的、值得自我指导的生物。他们可能有欲望,抑制欲望有时可能会伤害他们,但这是另一种观点。侵犯非人类动物(更有限的种类)的自主权可能是错误的,但如果不同种类的自主权处于危险之中,那么与模范人有关的道德论点就不能直接转移到非人类动物身上。必须提供一些额外的论据,但(在我的阅读中)这本书的贡献者没有提供这些。尽管如此,如上所述,控制伦理和非人类动物的自主性问题并没有像动物伦理中的其他问题那样得到很好的处理。尽管我对书中的一些细节有异议,但书中前两个部分的讨论值得一读,并有助于推动这一领域的发展。总的来说,这本书的章节写得很好,论点也很有说服力,考虑到它的广度,不同的读者会在其中发现不同的价值。实用动物伦理帕尔格雷夫手册是一个受欢迎的补充文献。
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Animals and Animality in Primo Levi's Work by Damiano Benvegnù (review)
fringing upon the autonomy of paradigmatic persons is wrong, infringing upon nonhuman animals’ autonomy is also wrong. The problem with this argument is that different kinds of autonomy are likely to be at stake. The wrongness of infringing upon paradigmatic persons’ autonomy is often explained by the facts that we are self-conscious, capable of abstract thought (including language use), and capable of intentionally choosing the kind of life that we want to live (e.g., relating to long-term projects or schemes of personal ethics). It could be argued that because nonhuman animals are not capable of exercising this kind of autonomy, they therefore cannot be harmed by its infringement. Some of the book’s authors chip away at this presumption, noting (inter alia) that nonhuman animals have desires to move around and do things that are thwarted by confinement or control, that these desires constitute a form of agency, and that (following previous scholarship) nonhuman animals possess some forms of self-awareness. Specifically, the chapters from Valéry Giroux and Carl Saucier-Bouffard, Lori Gruen, and Carlos Naconecy consider such arguments. Naconecy draws upon David DeGrazia’s (2009) analysis of animal self-awareness in making his argument. Though the issue deserves more treatment than I can give it here, it seems that nonhuman animals’ autonomy and self-awareness, even if granted, are of a different sort than that possessed by paradigmatic persons. Specifically, (most) nonhuman animals cannot feel wronged by having their preferences overridden because they are not the kinds of beings who are capable of abstractly considering themselves as autonomous and worthy of self-direction. They may desire things, and thwarting these desires might sometimes harm them, but that is a different kind of argument. Infringing upon nonhuman animals’ (more limited kind of) autonomy might nonetheless be wrong, but if different sorts of autonomy are at stake, then moral arguments relating to paradigmatic persons cannot be directly transposed to nonhuman animals. Some additional argument(s) must be supplied, but (on my reading) the book’s contributors stop short of this. Nonetheless, as stated above, the ethics of control and questions of nonhuman animals’ autonomy are not as well trod as other issues in animal ethics. Despite my taking issue with some of the details, the discussions contained in the book’s first two sections are worthy reading and help to advance the field. Overall, the book’s chapters are well written and cogently argued, and given its breadth, different readers will find different things to value in it. The Palgrave Handbook of Practical Animal Ethics is a welcome addition to the literature.
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