Preview

Article Review: Animals like Us

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
877 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Article Review: Animals like Us
Jimmy Betulia
3/29/14
Joe Selvaggio
English 101s MW 9am
Essay 2

A Higher Plane In the essay, “Animals Like Us” by Hal Herzog discusses the “trouble middle”, and whether or not humans have ethical obligations to animals. By troubled middle, Herzog means the problem between killing certain animals for food. For example, we don’t think twice about killing a cow for beef but to us (people in America) it is unethical to kill dogs for food. Yet, in some other countries it is okay to kill a dog for food. It is quite the troubled middle that most of us are in if the situation is given some thought. I think we do have obligations to animals, however, it really depends on what kind of animals and how obligated we feel towards them pending where we are from. In some countries it is okay to eat animals, and some other countries it might not be okay to eat an animal like that. Some cultures think of certain animals as a god where some other cultures might just think of that same animal as a meal. The more thought this situation is given the more difficult it seems to be. To eat a burger or have a piece of bacon doesn’t take much though, most people don’t think twice about eating it. But to eat a dog or cat in American society is something that we do frown upon and that is just wrong to us. Does this mean we do have ethical obligations to animals? To a point, yes we do. People have a decent sense of what is ethical to animals and what isn’t. We raise animals, that’s ethical if you ask me, but eating them after we raise them. Is that ethical? Are we helping with the circle of life? This is what the philosopher Strachan Donnelley calls “The Murky ethical territory”(247). It’s a very difficult situation. Herzog says, “Ethical Judgment puts humans on a different moral plane from that of other animals” (247). What he means by this is that humans, well most humans, think before they do something. We have ethical backgrounds. Animals don’t, or do they? We have a lot

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Why do people call the cops “pigs” in the form of an insult? “Taken up by protestors, the term ‘pig’ had been used early as the mid-1500s to refer to a person who is heartily disliked.” A staff member of Straight Dope Science Advisory answers this question stating that the name runs back to the early police force, Bow Street Runner. The characters that pigs or snakes typically symbolizes are considered human’s unacceptable behavior. Pigs are often depicted as a character who’s unclean, greedy, and conceited; being the displeasing character in stories or in religions.…

    • 745 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jeremy Rifkin 's article, “A Change of Heart About Animals” argues that animals are more like humans than we imagine and as a result should be treated with the care that they deserve. Rifkin develops and supports his argument using facts about the animals and these facts end up touching hearts. In order for Rifkin to get his point across he uses a smart technique by using pathos and plays with the emotions of his audience. Rifkin loves animals and his passion and love evokes emotions that the audience can feel. Animals can feel and have emotions similar to ours. in agreement with Rifkin, I argue that it is wrong and inhumane to kill or abuse animals because they feel, they deserve to have space and should be valued as much as humans are It is wrong no animal should be killed due to abuse or testing, it is wrong and inhumane.…

    • 838 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “An Animal’s Place” Michael Pollan (2002) talks about how he is reading “Animal Liberation” while eating a steak at a restaurant. He then starts to talk about the book and how it talks about giving animals civil rights. He then talks about the people who believe in the civil rights movement for animals and how England has changed their Constitution in order to protect animals. The European and Swiss are trying to also protect the rights of animals. Pollan talks about America still seeing animals as “things” (p.399) but we are changing some of our animal slaughter habits.…

    • 592 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Determining the rights of non-human animals and deciding how to treat them may not be a choice available to our human society. As an advocate for the rights of animals, Tom Reganʻs three main goals are to abandon the use of animals in any scientific research, discontinue all commercial animal agriculture, and to completely terminate both commercial and sport animal hunting. To support these intentions, Regan argues that every human and non-human animal possesses inherent value, which makes them all more than a physical object or vessel. He then states that possessing inherent value allows every human and non-human to have rights of their own. To further his argument, Regan claims that the any human and non-human retaining rights requires equal treatment and respect from others. To conclude his argument, Regan states that due to these reasons, non-human animals cannot be treated as resources and must be treated by humans as equals. In this paper, I object to Reganʻs third premise, which states that non-human and human animals must be treated as equals and with respect, because our communication barrier with non-human animals restricts us from determining their notion of equal treatment or respect, and that attempting to do so could…

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Justin Le Ms. Jackson ERWC English 28 October 2014 Animal Bill of Rights Despite our genetic makeup and ability, each living organism still obtains the ability to partake in the vast contribution towards this world. We as humans should be proactive in our role of establishing and maintaining a fine balance of life. A prominent responsibility we possess is to regard all living beings as equals.…

    • 518 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Animal testing is cruel and barbaric. In the article "A change of heart about animals" by Jeremy Rifkin, featured in the los Angeles Times, Rifkin discussed how scientists have discovered that animals are not far different from humans. The studies show that animals have similar emotions and reactions when experiencing such emotions in times of distress or fear. Despite these finding, animals are still continually tested on for products and other experiments in order to see what the result would be.…

    • 608 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    16 Phil 100 Singer

    • 1806 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Animals have no rational mind, and no soul; so we have no moral duty to…

    • 1806 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    There are numerous duped exchanges that are highlighted within the film Food Inc. and the text, Eating Animals written by Jonathan Safran Foer. The sad thing is, a large amount of people within the United States don’t know about these exchanges. Should animals be treated with the same respect as humans? Or possibly with the amount of respect that Native Americans give to the animals that they kill and use every inch of useful materials that they provide? Many people believe we should, so why isn’t animal welfare a bigger issue today?…

    • 1479 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The essay indicates humans’ behavior towards nonhuman animals. I will explain how factory farmers treat their livestock compared to non-factory farmers. I plan on bringing forth humans moral responsibilities to nonhuman animals.…

    • 639 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There are many different ways in which we utilize non-human animals. From clothing, to food, bi-products, even friendship, non-human animals are a very integral part of our lives, and as such raise questions of morality in terms to their treatment. I personally did not give much thought to my personal use of non-human animals prior to this, but it turns out that it is in fact very extensive. My main use of non-human animals is for nutritional purposes. My diet consists of a variety of products, but my protein intake is heavy on non-human animal meats. Aside from the uses I give non-human animals as part of my daily diet, non-human animals are also present in my wardrobe. Whether it is wool pants, a cashmere sweater, or leather shoes, many of the different items I chose to wear have some sort of non-human animal by-product in them, increasing the use I give those non-human animals. Finally, I, like many of us, use products that have been developed through the use of medical research on non-human animals.…

    • 996 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    When looking at things from an ethical perspective, one has to consider how to protect and preserve the basic needs of others as well as their own. There is no difference here when dealing with the well being of animals. Alice Walter and Ted Kerasote are two individuals who deal with ethical issues regarding the well being of animals, and while their stories are vastly different, their main points have overlapping similarities. In Anthony Weston’s A 21st Century Ethical Toolbox, both Walter and Kerasote’s experiences are explicitly detailed through Walter’s essay, “Am I Blue?,” and Kerasote’s excerpt from Bloodties: Nature, Culture, and the Hunt. Throughout both of their experiences, Weston’s three-part concept of ethics is put into full-effect.…

    • 1057 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Immanuel Kant Analysis

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Talking about animals and how ethics is applied to them is something that varies greatly depending on which philosopher you’re talking to. Some philosophers state that humans are superior to animals based on the fact that humans can use reason to make choices, while animals default to their instincts for their choices. This would mean that animals are merely instrumental to humans and can be used to serve the needs of humans in any way they see fit. Kant doesn’t differ much on how he thinks about animal mainly because Kant believes that good will is the only inherit good and as animals do not have good will they naturally don’t share the same values as humans, but were Kant differs is in how he thinks the treatment of animals effects humans as Kant stated, “With regard to the animate but non-rational part of creation, violent and cruel treatment of animals is far more intimately opposed to a human being’s duty to himself, and he has a duty to refrain from this; for it dulls his shared feeling of their suffering and so weakens and gradually uproots a natural predisposition that is very serviceable to morality in one’s relation with other men.” When comparing these ideas of ethics on animals with Kant’s ideas of how ethics are applied to animals we can see the…

    • 472 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Animals from creation have been an essential integral part of human beings. They have frequently been, either directly or indirectly, used by humans to achieve their needs. Hence they are important part and great asset to humans. These animals do have lives different from that of humans and equally have some similar characteristics with humans like emotional feelings. This very fact puts humans in a difficult position of determining the amount of respect and regard that should be accorded to the animals. Some people agitate that animals should be granted same equal rights as human beings. Inasmuch as I quite agree that animals should be granted some rights in order to be free from cruel treatments by humans, the issue of granting them equal full rights as enjoyed by humans should not come up. An objective review of such factors as tradition, cultural believes, religious, socio-economic, and medical as well as salient natural features that distinguish animals from humans like morality, and ability to…

    • 1570 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Animals are looked upon as just food, fiber, research and labor. Dogs are companions, pigs are bacon, what’s the difference? Cruelty on animals has been a worldwide issue for years, activists and protests groups have come together and bash the consumption of animal products including fur and leather. There have been over eight million animal species discovered and continues to grow, those animals deserve to live just like any other human being. Even going to the circus is considered animal cruelty. People who do not consume any animal products is called veganism. Veganism in the United States has increased by over thirty percent. A horrendous amount of fifty six billion animals killed each year for human consumption. Ethical, economical and…

    • 1173 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Regan, Tom. "Animal Rights, Human Wrongs." Forming a Critical Perspective. Boston, MA: Pearson Learning Solutions, 2010. 336-40. Print.…

    • 1234 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics