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The great ape debate

Peter SingerPeter Singer is Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University. His books include Writings on an Ethical Life and One World. His most recent book, co-authored with Jim Mason, is The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter. His last piece on Webdiary was Why Pay for More Fairness?

by Peter Singer

In his History of European Morals, published in 1869, the Irish historian and philosopher WEH Lecky wrote:

At one time the benevolent affections embrace merely the family, soon the circle expanding includes first a class, then a nation, then a coalition of nations, then all humanity and finally, its influence is felt in the dealings of man with the animal world...

The expansion of the moral circle could be about to take a significant step forwards. Francisco Garrido, a bioethicist and member of Spain’s parliament, has moved a resolution exhorting the government “to declare its adhesion to the Great Ape Project and to take any necessary measures in international forums and organisations for the protection of great apes from maltreatment, slavery, torture, death, and extinction.” The resolution would not have the force of law, but its approval would mark the first time that a national legislature has recognised the special status of great apes and the need to protect them, not only from extinction, but also from individual abuse.

I founded the Great Ape Project together with Paola Cavalieri, an Italian philosopher and animal advocate, in 1993. Our aim was to grant some basic rights to the nonhuman great apes: life, liberty, and the prohibition of torture.

The Project has proven controversial. Some opponents argue that, in extending rights beyond our own species, it goes too far, while others claim that, in limiting rights to the great apes, it does not go far enough.

We reject the first criticism entirely. There is no sound moral reason why possession of basic rights should be limited to members of a particular species. If we were to meet intelligent, sympathetic extraterrestrials, would we deny them basic rights because they are not members of our own species? At a minimum, we should recognise basic rights in all beings who show intelligence and awareness (including some level of self-awareness) and who have emotional and social needs.

We are more sympathetic to the second criticism. The Great Ape Project does not reject the idea of basic rights for other animals. It merely asserts that the case for such rights is strongest in respect to great apes. The work of researchers like Jane Goodall, Diane Fossey, Birute Galdikas, Frans de Waal, and many others amply demonstrates that the great apes are intelligent beings with strong emotions that in many ways resemble our own.

Chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas have long-term relationships, not only between mothers and children, but also between unrelated apes. When a loved one dies, they grieve for a long time. They can solve complex puzzles that stump most two-year-old humans. They can learn hundreds of signs, and put them together in sentences that obey grammatical rules. They display a sense of justice, resenting others who do not reciprocate a favor.

When we group chimpanzees together with, say, snakes, as “animals,” we imply that the gap between us and chimpanzees is greater than the gap between chimpanzees and snakes. But in evolutionary terms this is nonsense. Chimpanzees and bonobos are our closest relatives, and we humans, not gorillas or orangutans, are their closest relatives. Indeed, three years ago, a group of scientists led by Derek Wildman proposed, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, that chimpanzees have been shown to be so close to humans genetically that they should be included in the genus Homo.

Like any important and novel idea, Garrido’s proposal has aroused considerable debate in Spain. Some are concerned that it will interfere with medical research. But the only European biomedical research that has used great apes recently is the Biomedical Primate Research Centre at Rijswijk, in the Netherlands. In 2002, a review by the Dutch Royal Academy of Science found that the chimpanzee colony there was not serving any vital research purposes. The Dutch government subsequently banned biomedical research on chimpanzees. Thus, there is no European medical research currently being conducted on great apes, and one barrier to granting them some basic rights has collapsed.

Some of the opposition stems from misunderstandings. Recognising the rights of great apes does not mean that they all must be set free, even those born and bred in zoos, who would be unable to survive in the wild. Nor does it rule out euthanasia if that is in the interest of individual apes whose suffering cannot be relieved. Just as some humans are unable to fend for themselves and need others to act as their guardians, so, too, will great apes living in the midst of human communities. What extending basic rights to great apes does mean is that they will cease to be mere things that can be owned and used for our amusement or entertainment.

A final group of opponents recognises the strength of the case for extending rights to great apes, but worries that this may pave the way for the extension of rights to all primates, or all mammals, or all animals. They could be right. Only time will tell. But that is irrelevant to the merits of the case for granting basic rights to the great apes. We should not be deterred from doing right now by the fear that we may later be persuaded that we should do right again.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2006.
www.project-syndicate.org
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one ape beats 40 humans by not going up everest in the firstcase

We like to think that we are the higher evolutionary species but it is we who have to ban torture by people. Also apes are not dumb enough to climb mountains and pay huge amounts for that pain, but they probably would walk past a dying fellow on the way up if the trip was rewarded (or already paid) for – oh, hang on ,that's what 40 humans just did.

The world will definitely be a better place when apes rule. Nothing to lose but may gain a chance at a new evolutionary branch.

Cheers

On the not unrelated

On the not unrelated subjects of ethics and thought and everything … (RSVP foot of page) “FROM STARS TO BRAINS: PATHWAYS TO CONSCIOUSNESS IN THE NATURAL WORLD”.  An open conference at the Australian Academy of Science’s Shine Dome Canberra, June 20 and 21, organised by Manning Clark House.

Astonishing advances in science over the last 150 years have provided insights into the basic laws of nature and the evolution of galaxies, stars, planets and life forms. Fundamental questions remain about the origin of the universe, the origin of complex bio-molecules on which all life is founded, and the emergence of consciousness. Whereas major advances have been made in understanding how the universe works, why-type questions remain a subject of speculation.

This conference, celebrating the work and 60th birthday of physicist Professor Paul Davies, will explore these questions. With Prof Davies will be physicist and cosmologist Professor George Ellis, who studied black holes jointly with Stephen Hawking. Other speakers will discuss aspects of astronomy (Michael Dopita), earth science (Richard Arculus), the origin of DNA (David Penny), early life (Jochen Brocks), perception (Peter Robinson), information theory (Gerard Milburn), the science of consciousness (David Chalmers), consciousness and theology (Paul Collins), mass consciousness (Phillip Adams), artistic expressions of consciousness (Elizabeth Truswell, Mark O‚Connor) and the search for intelligent life in the universe (Charley Lineweaver).For the last 20 years Paul Davies, working at the University of Adelaide and at the Centre of Astrobiology, Macquarie University, has explored some of these questions in numerous books and articles, considering parallels between scientific enigmas and spiritual and religious perceptions.

This conference, including extended discussion sessions, will provide a public forum to explore some of these fundamental questions in terms of modern science, philosophy, culture and religion. The conference dinner is on Tuesday 20 June at 7.30pm. Speakers will be Paul Davies, George Ellis and Fred Mendelsohn. Paul Davies is a physicist/philosopher, very interested in notions of God; George Ellis a mathematician/philosopher, works with Stephen Hawking; and Fred Mendelsohn is the Director of the Howard Florey Institute, Australia’s largest brain research centre. It’ll be a truly special evening and give a lot of thought for discussion.

Conference & dinner enquiries: Penny Ramsay 6295 9433 or www.manninmgclark.org.au Conference & dinner bookings: Liz Shaw 6295 1808 or manningclark@ozemail.com.au 

David C: Hi Peter, thanks for that.  Might see you there.

Smarter than us

It is high time everyone recognised that most animals are a lot smarter than we, in the blind arrogance of our species, give them credit for. And as the scientists find out more and more on that score I am appalled that they could go on doing what they do to animals in the name of science, and not just to primates. And let's not forget those lower down the evolutionary ladder. They are not so different to us, no matter how much we like to pretend they are, just so we can justify what we do to them, and go on doing it.

For example, anyone who has owned a couple of small terriers will know that they display many of the emotions that we say make us human, and different. I have spent enough time in outpatients being stitched up after yet another jealous rage from a certain little pooch who claims me as his own, to know that jealousy is part of his emotional makeup. Should I dare to pat his colleague, I make sure he is not around to see it. When I see what is done to dogs in places like Korea and China, where they are seen as food, it upsets me greatly.

And when I see the magpies in the yard carefully running here and there to pick up the bits of bread I throw out, carry them to one central point, stack them in a pile, and then pick the whole lot up and carry them off in one hit, who am I to say they are not capable of logical and rational thought?

Who was it who said it is not whether they can reason, or whether they can think, but can they suffer, that is the point. J Bentham I think. Well we know they can suffer, and I suggest they can think logically as well.

This is a subject very dear to my heart and I salute that Spaniard. I just hope he might also turn his attention to that particular abomination in Spain, called bull fighting.

Only with the good looking ones

You bet, I've seen the evidence of it many times.

Re: Only with the good looking ones

Men! They say they'll call, and three million years later you're still waiting by the phone.

But seriously folks

Before I get carried away exploring the comic possibilities it would be discourteous not to get the subject matter on track.

I don't know how this can be discussed however because it is a matter of personal feelings. For me it does not go far enough, most higher animals are people in my mind, some more pleasant than others admittedly. That humans can have very strong feelings of love or at least deep affection for their pets and the very strong bonds that develop between them I think is evidence enough that even dogs and to a lesser extent cats have a not dissimilar range of emotions to ours. (Cats however have no sense of humour that I can discern but they can certainly get pissed off.)

Cruelty of any description is abhorrent to me and I believe those who are cruel to animals are as equally capable of meting out similar treatment to their fellow man. One of my pet hates (don't you just hate that), are animal breeders who invite poor aberrant creatures into this world to face a life time of discomfort, ill health and sometimes drastic consequences for humans that come into contact with them. That is a subject for bio-ethicists.

As to the other matter, I don't believe it is possible because what ever one can imagine of human behaviour one can be assured it has happened (think HIV) and I've never come across any report of resulting offspring. Having said that I remember some twenty odd years ago a case in America where a mule foaled so maybe it's not without the bounds of possibility. You can imagine the American military getting interested.

As to the ethics of it, I can see no problem as long as you still respect them in the morning.

Man's Monkey Business

In today's SMH ... Man's Monkey Business

and today's Age ... Chimp study shakes human family tree ...

Peter, I'd be interested in your comment re the last paragraph in The Age, by Dr Groves ...  It probably deserves a topic of its own!


 

 

If you insist in provoking an innocent animal…

GUV SAYS “YEAH, BUT…” ON GENES

Dr Grovachev, tear down this wall! “Dr Groves said that even today it could be possible for humans and chimps to have sex and produce offspring, although there would be ethical problems.” (The Age, May 19, 2006).

Sydney’s Taronga Park, Zoological Gardens any day sees a very popular exhibit enthralling (that’s the promotional term) tourist and visitors with imprisoned chimpanzees. The chimps peep at the humans, the humans stare unabashedly at their cousins. Offspring and mummies are common on both sides.

Kids especially love a low level heavy window on the eastern side of the jail. The occasional kid notes the enclosure and asks: “But what have they done?” Mums and dads note the strong jaws and teeth and hands and explain that it’s safer this way.

The chimps do a fair bit of eating, squabbling, masturbating and scratching, sitting together, leaping about and generally doing much look-see about their little enclosed country. They’re looked after not only with food and warm shelter, but also with a health system better than that of the lower percentiles of Australians.

They are under constant observation. It’s a bit like East Germany before the Lutherans and the young people nibbled through then smashed the Wall. And they have an occupying army of much bigger and cleverer apes to make sure they don’t get out of hand. Keepers and cops and outside, a real army, fresh back from all over the shop, from Innisfail to Iraq. It’s all a bit brutal.

While we coyly discuss sex between apes and humans in the better papers, might we not discuss giving them a Wende? Or even a better prison. The orangutans in their glass jail got out from behind the heavy bars in old Sydney Town. You know, old Sydney Town - the convict prison set up by drunkards, rapists and bawds, with a strict religious overtone, executions and floggings to the raw backbone, and grog as currency. While they shat in the beautiful little Tank Stream and cut the trees down as an example to the Blacks on that front as well.

The ex-military Mal Brough Man is the latest example of the colonial convict overseer, setting about himself with sermons, paddy wagon and the lash.

And our strange little Governor Howard is quickly sailing back from his visit to King George’s Colonial Office with good news for all. Barely slowing the pace of his two-week international walking holiday except to include a march without stopping up Everest, right past the frozen, dying Pommy bloke. After all, it’s the Kirribilli style to get to the summit quickly, whack a wedge in the ice and then whiz back to Mummy and the servants at Base Camp.

I raise the issue of the Governor only because he shows clear signs of man-ape miscegenation in his appearance. The heavy, hairy brow, the worn-away hair, the squinting frown and protuberant teeth and lip, the incomprehensible odd naso-glottal noises, along with his odd gait, are deeply simian. This may explain Governor Howard’s close comfort with the alpha–male King George, although the latter’s strange appearance and behaviour seems more marmoset or even Alfred E Newman than a product of hominid-chimp inter-species sex. The King George/Governor genes could be quite distant.

Tragically, they may never be able to reproduce….we may be witnessing an extinction. With any luck.

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