Sunday, July 31, 2022

 

In “Fellow Creatures,” the philosopher Christine Korsgaard maintains that our treatment of other animals is a “moral atrocity,” but she also argues that nonhuman animals are not moral beings; that people are distinctive in being able to reflect upon their moral reasons and considerations and those of others. We’re not just aware of things; we’re aware that we’re aware of them. We’re uniquely aware too that others have independent interests and perspectives that may be worth respecting. So some philosophers will say that people who ascribe moralized emotions to their pets are indulging a sort of fiction.

What’s plainly not a fiction is that animals can suffer. The quality of the life of a dog or a cat is a matter of the quality of its moment-to-moment experiences. They have no projects to complete; their lives have no narrative arc that matters to them. They do not fear death in the way we do: As far as we can tell, they do not have the concept of death. That’s why the sorts of reasons a person might have for going on even after existence has become a source of pain don’t apply to them. We can ask people whether they want to undergo an arduous treatment that might prolong their days by some amount or whether, say, they prefer to enter hospice care. Your mother and her sisters evidently faced a decision like that. That’s not a question you can pose to your dog.

What you owe your dog is a life worth living by the standards that are appropriate to a canine existence, attentive to what matters to a dog. So you shouldn’t organize treatments that will simply extend a period of suffering, even if you can afford to do so without jeopardizing your own quality of life. Some people, hoping against hope, subject their animals to excruciating courses of radiation and chemotherapy in an effort to buy a few more months of companionship. They ought to do what human beings are capable of doing but often fail to do: reflect on their actions. They should think about whom they’re really helping, about whether this costly form of care amounts to cruelty.

If your dog is entering a final decline, marked by debility and suffering, and, out of concern for his welfare, you choose euthanasia, you will not be letting him down. He has no expectations to disappoint. There are no promises you have made to him. His loss will matter a great deal to you. Don’t make the experience worse by thinking that you have done him wrong.

Kwame Anthony Appiah
The New York Times Magazine
July 31, 2022

Friday, July 8, 2022

You say that I desire only to rule or ruin... I planned to do neither, but I did endeavor to put before the country a platform of principles, and to inaugurate an organization, which will sooner or later, succeed in crushing our monopolies, and speculators in the necessaries of life such as grain, by whom the farmer, producer, and the laboring men, the consumers are alike robbed. 

Benjamin Butler

Benjamin Franklin Butler: A Noisy Fearless Life
Elizabeth D. Leonard

I begin to doubt whether anybody can be President, of either party, who is not a slave of the same ring... Associated capital brought in contact with the Government by the war naturally affiliated with the Republican party then being in power, not because of any principle of the Republican party, but because the Republican party was in power... as soon as it is apparent that the Democratic party is to be in power, the same associated capital will become connected with that power, and will control its action. 

Benjamin Butler

Benjamin Franklin Butler: A Noisy Fearless Life
Elizabeth D. Leonard

I note what you say about the prejudice that exits in the South in regard to myself...  The people in the South remember that I carried on war against them when they were my enemy and the enemies of my country... When I am called to make war, I kill slay, and destroy my enemies in every way I can... I am sorry I did not do it better, and more of it, because that would have saved a great many valuable lives on both sides... I make peace the same way that I make war... When I am at peace, I am at peace all over, and I don't have any sleeping prejudices against those with whom I make peace because they were once my enemies. 

Benjamin Butler

Benjamin Franklin Butler: A Noisy, Fearless Life
Elizabeth D. Leonard