Utilitarianism for Animals, Kantianism for People? Harming Animals and Humans for the Greater Good

Most people hold that it is wrong to sacrifice some humans to save a greater number of humans. Do people also think that it is wrong to sacrifice some animals to save a greater number of animals, or do they answer such questions about harm to animals by engaging in a utilitarian cost-benefit calcula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2021-05, Vol.150 (5), p.1008-1039
Hauptverfasser: Caviola, Lucius, Kahane, Guy, Everett, Jim A. C., Teperman, Elliot, Savulescu, Julian, Faber, Nadira S.
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container_end_page 1039
container_issue 5
container_start_page 1008
container_title Journal of experimental psychology. General
container_volume 150
creator Caviola, Lucius
Kahane, Guy
Everett, Jim A. C.
Teperman, Elliot
Savulescu, Julian
Faber, Nadira S.
description Most people hold that it is wrong to sacrifice some humans to save a greater number of humans. Do people also think that it is wrong to sacrifice some animals to save a greater number of animals, or do they answer such questions about harm to animals by engaging in a utilitarian cost-benefit calculation? Across 10 studies (N = 4,662), using hypothetical and real-life sacrificial moral dilemmas, we found that participants considered it more permissible to harm a few animals to save a greater number of animals than to harm a few humans to save a greater number of humans. This was explained by a reduced general aversion to harm animals compared with humans, which was partly driven by participants perceiving animals to suffer less and to have lower cognitive capacity than humans. However, the effect persisted even in cases where animals were described as having greater suffering capacity and greater cognitive capacity than some humans, and even when participants felt more socially connected to animals than to humans. The reduced aversion to harming animals was thus also partly due to speciesism-the tendency to ascribe lower moral value to animals due to their species-membership alone. In sum, our studies show that deontological constraints against instrumental harm are not absolute but get weaker the less people morally value the respective entity. These constraints are strongest for humans, followed by dogs, chimpanzees, pigs, and finally inanimate objects.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/xge0000988
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subjects Animal
Aversion
Chimpanzees
Cognitive ability
Dogs
Female
Human
Interspecies Interaction
Male
Morality
Pigs
Social Dilemma
Social Interaction
Utilitarianism
title Utilitarianism for Animals, Kantianism for People? Harming Animals and Humans for the Greater Good
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