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The pros and cons of anthropomorphism

Libell, Monica LU (2004) In EurSafe
Abstract
Much of the animal ethics and welfare debate today is accused of anthropomorphism, i.e. that human mental states are ascribed to animals. It is generally claimed that these attitudes does no service to animals, since they, according to many natural scientists, usually fail to recognize what animals really are, that animals' needs and responses are actually very different from humans'.

The damaging consequences seem to abound: The meat industry laments the so-called disneyfication of animals, that consumers identify pigs with the "movie stars" in Babe. This leads to a decrease in meat consumption and the promotion of legal restrictions, which financially strain the industry.

Veterinarians are confronted with clients who... (More)
Much of the animal ethics and welfare debate today is accused of anthropomorphism, i.e. that human mental states are ascribed to animals. It is generally claimed that these attitudes does no service to animals, since they, according to many natural scientists, usually fail to recognize what animals really are, that animals' needs and responses are actually very different from humans'.

The damaging consequences seem to abound: The meat industry laments the so-called disneyfication of animals, that consumers identify pigs with the "movie stars" in Babe. This leads to a decrease in meat consumption and the promotion of legal restrictions, which financially strain the industry.

Veterinarians are confronted with clients who treat their pets like small children. Even very basic animal needs may be frustrated which sometimes leads to the point where serious welfare problems arise.

However, anthropomorphism is a complex cultural and emotional phenomenon, as it is closely related to the human capacity of feeling empathy for another individual. This may at times be misguided, but proves at other times to be a powerful and useful tool in the interaction with non-human animals. Historically it was instrumental in raising the awareness of the plight of animals in society, which led to ethical benefits such as demands for the humane treatment of animals and even for animal rights.

Anthropomorphism should therefore not offhand be regarded as a defect in society but as a potentially valuable cultural, ethical, and scientific force. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
pets, anthropomorphism, science, animal ethics
in
EurSafe
pages
6 pages
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
6de9a983-fa74-45fc-95fa-81cec3d9ebb4 (old id 1037629)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:22:35
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:13:33
@misc{6de9a983-fa74-45fc-95fa-81cec3d9ebb4,
  abstract     = {{Much of the animal ethics and welfare debate today is accused of anthropomorphism, i.e. that human mental states are ascribed to animals. It is generally claimed that these attitudes does no service to animals, since they, according to many natural scientists, usually fail to recognize what animals really are, that animals' needs and responses are actually very different from humans'.<br/><br>
 The damaging consequences seem to abound: The meat industry laments the so-called disneyfication of animals, that consumers identify pigs with the "movie stars" in Babe. This leads to a decrease in meat consumption and the promotion of legal restrictions, which financially strain the industry. <br/><br>
 Veterinarians are confronted with clients who treat their pets like small children. Even very basic animal needs may be frustrated which sometimes leads to the point where serious welfare problems arise.<br/><br>
 However, anthropomorphism is a complex cultural and emotional phenomenon, as it is closely related to the human capacity of feeling empathy for another individual. This may at times be misguided, but proves at other times to be a powerful and useful tool in the interaction with non-human animals. Historically it was instrumental in raising the awareness of the plight of animals in society, which led to ethical benefits such as demands for the humane treatment of animals and even for animal rights. <br/><br>
 Anthropomorphism should therefore not offhand be regarded as a defect in society but as a potentially valuable cultural, ethical, and scientific force.}},
  author       = {{Libell, Monica}},
  keywords     = {{pets; anthropomorphism; science; animal ethics}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Conference Abstract}},
  series       = {{EurSafe}},
  title        = {{The pros and cons of anthropomorphism}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}