Hyenas are People Too

Human exceptionalism is under furious assault on many fronts, with advocates who seek to dismantle it, zealously looking for any and every sign that we are no different, really, from animals.
One of the newest memes in this regard is that animals are moral beings--just like us. I bring this up because University of Wisconsin professor (of course) Deborah Blum in the New Scientist uses the vehicle of a book review to push the notion that animals are moral people too. From the review:
Wild Justice makes a compelling argument for open-mindedness regarding non-human animals. It also argues that social behaviours such as cooperation provide evidence for a sophisticated animal consciousness. In particular, the authors propose that other animal species possess empathy, compassion and a sense of justice--in other words, a moral code not unlike our own.Well animals clearly cooperate, look at lions on the hunt and cape buffalo or bison making a circle to protect the calves from predators. But that is hardly a moral code, at least not in the human sense.
The book apparently views this so-called "moral code" (which may be Blum's term) as merely evolutionary behavior:
Their definition of morality is a strongly Darwinian one. They see moral actions as dictated by the behavioural code of social species, the communal operating instructions that bond a group safely together, the "social glue" of survival. They believe such codes are necessarily species-specific and warn against, for instance, judging wolf morals by the standards of monkeys, dolphins or humans.Perhaps, but that certainly isn't true of human beings. We have many different societies with divergent moral codes and behaviors--ranging from flat-out pacifism and chastity, hardly conducive to raw survival--to cannibalism. And that is precisely because our morality is not wholly "dictated" by blind evolutionary forces.
The evolutionary argument seems reasonable, but Blum clearly yearns for animal "morality" to be something more:
My only complaint is that the book is overly careful. The authors try too hard to keep their conclusions non-threatening. I wish they'd attempted to answer that tricky question that nags at me whenever I study a captive animal. As I stand on the unrestricted side of a fence watching a hyena, and it watches me back with deep, wary eyes, which one of us is really the moral animal?If Blum really doesn't know the answer to that question, I'll help: We are. Hyenas can never be held morally accountable for anything they do. But we can and should be so held. That is a distinction that no amount of anthropomorphizing can erase.
Labels: Human Exceptionalism. Human Morality. Animal "Morality."


15 Comments:
Since the dawn of time humans have been searching for the connection between us and animals. Why else would we domesticate dogs, teach them "language" and keep them as companions? Unfortunately, we're all too quick to assign base level survival instincts (the spectrum of preservation and emotional bonds) as "human" characteristics. We manage to simultaneously overemphasize our own importance and downplay our own intellect.
At the core, our morality is dictated by our ability to weigh a specific instance against our instincts. For example, human beings have the unique ability to step outside of our instinctual preservation spectrum and willingly and rationally risk our lives for someone wholly unrelated to ourselves. Animals will save their children, or, perhaps, another member of the pack, but will not risk their own life to save a fellow species member that they have never seen before. We also have the ability to make subjective, on the fly decisions about our moral code (foraying into "gray areas"), where animals use black and white instinctual responses to respond to a situation.
One of the most common applications of this is what my mom and I joke of as the Lassie Complex. The dog isn't rushing back home to report Timmy's distress because of any moral compass. He's doing it because his instincts tell him Timmy is part of his pack, possibly even his own pup, and must be protected.
Becky:"At the core, our morality is dictated by our ability to weigh a specific instance against our instincts." Yes, that is well stated. Also, we change animals when they come into more than casual contact with us.
Don't forget house cats! My Emerson is a person, too!!!
It is a uniquely human act to anguish over the morality of humans.
Only human beings see our hypocrisy, our own evil and failings. Only we have invented an incredibly complex language to speculate on it in journals like these.
Interesting you would be critical of Deborah Blum. Her book "The Monkey Wars" is an exceptionally well written presentation of both sides of primate research. She presenting both the positives and the ugly side of primate research. She also gave the AR's an ample platform for explaining their position, mostly in their own words.
So of course that got her put on the AR enemy list.
I highly recommend the book for anyone interested in the AR debate, from any perspective.
Padraig: I wasn't critical of her generally. I made no comment about her other than what was written in the review, or to put it another way, I was critical of her specifically. So, if someone has written things with which I agree, I can't point out something with which I don't agree?
"So, if someone has written things with which I agree, I can't point out something with which I don't agree?"
I didn't say that, didn't even argue with your assessment. Although I was a bit irked at your snippy reference to her being at the University of Wisconsin, which hardly seemed germane. Lots of Badgers out here, Wes.
That wasn't my main point, anyway. I was just pointing out the irony of Blum's being held out by pro-AR's as an establishment lackey on one hand, and being held out by you as sympathetic to AR values on the other. Just shows how people who try to achieve balance in a conflict wind up getting blasted by both sides.
Padraig: I took the shot at "professors" because it seems they are the ones that always lead the charge into wild and radical territory.
I didn't say she was sympathetic to AR values, which hold that the ability to suffer or being sentient gives moral value. That's a different matter than being against human exceptionalism based on materialistic or neo Darwinian values, which hold that we share so many genes with animals that species distinctions are not meaningful, or, as seems the case with Blum, that the capacities and characteristics differentiating humans and animals are merely differences of degree and thus are not morally meaningful. When she writes that she doesn't know which is the moral species, hyenas or humans, she has a criticism coming.
Morality among animals:
Mom and I feed the stray cats in our neighborhood. They're not animals that wandered away from home, they're animals that were taken in by a family, stuck outside, and only kept around when they were cute to play with. Now they're older and sick and the family that wanted them doesn't want the responsibility of them. They're not neutered, they're not given their shots, and I have two babies at home to take care of, so I can't risk bringing these strays inside to care for them, lest they give their leukemia to my girls. And I hate it, because I want all of them healthy, but I can't fight with their owners.
Back on Sunday, something happened that knocked a bird's nest out of a tree. One of the flightless babies died, the other one lived and was curled up in the grass, cheeping its head off for Mom and Dad. The parents had apparently abandoned the nest when it fell, because no adult birds came around at all, the way they swoop on us when they are feeling protective of their young.
I scooped the baby back into its nest and stuck it near its original tree, so if the parents were around, they'd come and care for the baby. (I wore gloves to keep my scent off of the chick, so it wouldn't be abandoned if the parents were still around.) I also fed it bread crumbs, since I didn't have anything else to feed it with.
My friends and I had made plans to go out, and I couldn't back out of them, so I left the bird in its nest. Mom had come home from work sometime after I went out, and had seen the chick and given it some bread soaked in milk. But again, we didn't want to risk scaring off the parents, so we left the bird in its nest.
By the time I got home, the bird was gone, not a trace of it. It'd been little enough we didn't think it would have wandered off, and even if it had, we should have heard it cheeping. Eventually we found its wing, still covered with the pre-feather fuzz. The cats I feed had themselves a picnic.
Here's me, a human being, crying over this baby bird, and at the same time I can't fault the cats because they have to eat, and they're in dire straights themselves, having been abandoned by *their* owners. I can't fault the cats for coming in my yard, since I give them food. I can't say to the cats, "That was morally wrong, because it was a baby and didn't have a fighting chance against you," because the cats need to eat, and a baby bird is probably the first bird they've been able to get close to that didn't swoop down and bite off tail fur. The birds in my neighborhood have lots of cats to contend with, so they're rather aggressive.
A cat is amoral. She only does what she understands is good for her survival. A person is moral. I have the responsibility to weigh my actions, to reveiw them - what would have been the best course to take? If I hadn't stumbled on the chick by accident, I'd never have known it was there, and the cats would've gotten it anyway. What can I do better, to help the animals in my area?
I have to weigh the morality of caring for strays without being financially able to give them the medicine they need - being unemployed is a pain - and the morality of risking my own cats' health by having strays around, even though my girls are indoors only.
This isn't something I can choose to ignore. The empathy I have for all animals, so different from myself, means I have to make tough choices. Animals don't have to make those choices because they don't have the cognition to know wrong from right, good from evil. They don't know how to weigh one good against another, and they don't feel pain when they cause harm to another for their own good.
I'm still feeding the strays. And trying to make moral choices. The cats have one advantage over me - they don't have to worry about those types of things.
HUUMMM. Has anyone really noted that animals are territorial & take no prisoners in their boundaries. There is no such thing as a moral code in the other animal species nor would any thinking person miss that truth.
Oh, for heaven's sake. We have thumbs, and all kinds of stuff the other animals don't have, including what we term "morality." That doesn't make us better than they are, and it's not a matter of status in the first place. I'll take a non-human animal "behaving like an animal" over another human any day when it comes to being able to respect someone. ANY day.
p.s. If human exceptionalism were a sound doctrine, it wouldn't need to pose and have discussions like this. It's like methink it doth protest too much... Some things just ARE. Leave them alone and focus on what REALLY matters.
If it's valid, it doesn't need discussion, or touting, or advancing, or defending, and it CAN'T be attacked or dismantled. Methinks... Anyway, this has nothing to do with the culture of death; it's vivisection that does. Good luck stopping futile care theory without stopping vivisection.
You want ethics in medicine and science, go back to where the wrong turn was and straighten things out there.
Actually we are the only animal that has philosophical debate and I think it makes us exceptional for that factor. Two mentally handicapped can enjoy sharing thoughts about the little red fire truck they are playing with or Stephen Hawkings can debate Quantum Physics with the team that broke the Human Genome .We are exceptional in the fact that we are so diverse , so willing to share and to disagree.
I loved my dog for being a dog but I love my family friends and community all the more for their diversity and humanity. When my son expressed his love for his dog by saying how much he was going to miss him when he left home to establish his military career it just didn't get matched by our dogs noncommunicable reply.
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