Should Animal Welfare Be Defined in Terms of Consciousness?
Jonathan Birch
Abstract
Abstract Definitions of animal welfare often invoke consciousness or sentience. Marian Stamp Dawkins has argued that to define animal welfare this way is a mistake. In Dawkins’s alternative view, an animal with good welfare is one that is healthy and “has what it wants.” The dispute highlights a source of strain on the concept of animal welfare: consciousness-involving definitions are better able to capture the normative significance of welfare, whereas consciousness-free definitions facilitate the validation of welfare indicators. I reflect on how the field should respond to this strain, ultimately recommending against splitting the concept and in favor of consciousness-involving definitions.
Topics & Concepts
SentienceConsciousnessAnimal welfareNormativeWelfareMistakeEpistemologyPositive economicsEnvironmental ethicsPsychologyPhilosophySociologyPolitical scienceEconomicsLawEcologyBiologyPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentPhilosophical Ethics and TheoryAnimal testing and alternatives