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Research Articles

Hunting, the Duty to Aid, and Wild Animal Ethics

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Pages 422-431 | Received 26 Oct 2022, Accepted 23 May 2023, Published online: 21 Jun 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Herein I engage with the very difficult question of whether the duty to aid (sometimes called a duty of assistance or a duty of beneficence) extends so far as to justify harming persons, perhaps even lethally, in order to protect wild animals. I argue that this question is not nearly as settled as our intuitions may suggest and that Shelly Kagan’s arguments on Defending Animals, contained in his book How to Count Animals, More or Less, provide a rich substrate in which to cultivate ideas on this subject (2019, pp. 248–279). My intuition is that killing a person, even one ‘guilty’ of trying to kill an animal for sport or leisure, is far beyond what a duty to aid can command, though admittedly I find my own intuition somewhat morally dumbfounding. I argue further that Tom Regan’s ‘worse-off principle’ may ease the ever-uncomfortable sense of moral dumbfounding by providing a surer foundation for the intuitive sense that we cannot ethically go so far as to threaten a person with lethal force in defense of nonhuman animals.

Acknowledgments

I would like to thank J.S. Russell for helpful comments on a previous draft of this article, particularly in regards to my discussion of vigilante justice.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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