Can Animals Be Moral?

Can Animals Be Moral? by Mark Rowlands, published by Oxford University Press in March 2015, explores the complex question of whether animals can exhibit moral behavior. This reprint edition spans 274 pages and is presented in English. Rowlands delves into various philosophical and scientific perspectives, examining the reasoning of notable thinkers from Aristotle to Darwin, and challenges the prevailing notion that animals lack the capacity for moral action.
In this thought-provoking work, Rowlands presents evidence of animals displaying behaviors that suggest moral feelings, such as elephants mourning their dead and monkeys refusing food to prevent harm to others. He argues that while humans possess a unique moral consciousness, this does not preclude animals from acting on basic moral reasons that involve concern for others. The book invites readers to reconsider the definitions of morality and the capabilities of non-human animals, engaging with topics such as ethics, animal rights, and comparative psychology.
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From eye-witness accounts of elephants apparently mourning the death of family members to an experiment that showed that hungry rhesus monkeys would not take food if doing so gave another monkey an electric shock, there is much evidence of animals displaying what seem to be moral feelings. But despite such suggestive evidence, philosophers steadfastly deny that animals can act morally, and for reasons that virtually everyone has found convincing.
In Can Animals be Moral?, philosopher Mark Rowlands examines the reasoning of philosophers and scientists on this question–ranging from Aristotle and Kant to Hume and Darwin–and reveals that their arguments fall far short of compelling. The basic argument against moral behavior in animals is that humans have capabilities that animals lack. We can reflect on our motivations, formulate abstract principles that allow that allow us to judge right from wrong. For an actor to be moral, he or she must be able scrutinize their motivations and actions. No animal can do these things–no animal is moral. Rowland naturally agrees that humans possess a moral consciousness that no animal can rival, but he argues that it is not necessary for an individual to have the ability to reflect on his or her motives to be moral. Animals can’t do all that we can do, but they can act on the basis of some moral reasons–basic moral reasons involving concern for others. And when they do this, they are doing just what we do when we act on the basis of these reasons: They are acting morally.
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