IT is pretty well established that animals are capable of suffering; we've come a long way since Descartes famously compared them to nonfeeling machines put on earth to serve man. (Rousseau later countered this, saying that animals shared "some measure" of human nature and should partake of "natural right.") No matter where you stand on this spectrum, you probably agree that it's a noble goal to reduce the level of the suffering of animals raised for meat in industrial conditions. There are four ways to move toward fixing this. One, we can improve the animals' living conditions; two (this is distasteful but would shock no one), we might see producers reduce or even eliminate animals' consciousness, say, by removing the cerebral cortex, in effect converting them to a kind of vegetable (see Margaret Atwood's horrifying description in her prescient "Oryx and Crake"); three, we can... |
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At www.nytimes.com
OpedNews volunteer from 2005 to 2013.
Amanda Lang was a wonderful member of the Opednews team, and the first volunteer editor, for a good number of years being a senior editor. She passed away summer 2014.