ARE CHURCH LEADERS SENTIENT?[1]
The
question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer?
~ Jeremy Bentham,
1748-1832
An Introduction To The Principles Of Morals
And Legislation
I
apologize that this week I have not had time to write a reflection on scripture
and animals. I did, however attend a two-day
conference this week entitled The Science
of Animal Thinking and Emotion: Sentience as a Factor in Policy and Practice, and
I’d like to offer just a few thoughts on why I attended this conference, what I
learned, and why the church should care.
The conference was
sponsored by the Humane Society Institute for Science & Policy and featured
scientists and policy makers from a wide range of disciplines and from around
the world. We learned about studies
being done regarding the emotional and intellectual lives of dogs, chimps,
bonobos, fish, farm animals, prairie dogs, and crocodilians. We heard about the impacts the advances in
our understanding of animal sentience has had in the European Union, strides
being made in China, and the role of media in shaping public understanding and
opinion of proper treatment of animals.
It was a very full two days.
The purpose of the conference was to bring together scholars, policy-makers, and others interested in understanding what we know – and don’t know – about how different kinds of animals experience the world and how that should shape public policy toward the treatment of animals. I went because it seems to me that understanding how animals experience the world should be critical in developing our theological understanding of who we are and how we should relate to animals – that is, understanding sentience is critical to understanding the obligations imposed on us in the gift of dominion, and how we can best reflect to our fellow creatures the image of the God who created us all.
If policymakers accept that
changes in our understanding of animal sentience should bring changes in laws regarding
their treatment, shouldn’t church leaders and theologians understand that this
knowledge, especially combined with recent scholarship about what it means to
be created in the image of God, should affect our ethical and theological
obligations toward them – and that, because their suffering is real and lasting
and largely imposed by humans, it matters
theologically?
One of the things that
struck me about the conference was the fact that there seems to be little
debate among scientists now regarding whether or not animals are sentient – that is, aware of the
world around them and what is happening to them. They have both intelligence and emotions. The questions now being asked are in what ways
are different species sentient? The
conference speakers and attendees, of course, made an animal-friendly crowd,
and we certainly did not address all species, so I don’t want to overstate this
point, but there were plenty of well-credentialed scientists in the audience
who questioned speakers about the limits of their research and conclusions, so
had the underlying premise been a matter of serious scientific debate, I am
confident it would have been addressed.
Another thing that
struck me was the efforts made to understand the animals’ experiences from the animals’ points of view. So, for example, there was discussion about
the folly of trying to measure animal intelligence against human standards – or
against the intelligence of other species.
One speaker noted that when he is asked by reporters whether dolphins
are smarter than chimps or a three-year-old human, or some other animal, he
responds that he will answer that question if the reporter can tell him whether
a hammer is a better tool than a screwdriver.
As Jonathan Balcombe has put it, comparing animal intelligence
cross-species is like comparing the way animals move. “Do fish move better than horses? . . . Animals are as intelligent as they need
to be.”[2] This perspective strikes me as a significant step
forward in understanding the inherent value of animals because it lets the animals
be animals, functioning in their own worlds and accomplishing their own
objectives - and it values those
objectives, without needing to compare the animals to humans or make the
animals’ objectives relevant to humans. This,
it seems to me, is where the church at large falls so woefully short: in recognizing
the inherent value of animals (their value to the God who made and loves them)
wholly apart from their value to, or relationship with, humans.
So, here is where we
are: there is general scientific
consensus that mammals, at least, are capable of suffering physical pain, that
they have emotional lives, including happiness and sorrow. There seems to be growing consensus that same
can be said of fishes.
There is recognition in many parts of the world that this imposes moral or ethical obligations on the way humans should treat animals. The Treaty of Lisbon agreed to by the European Union in 2009, for example, includes this language from article 13:
There is recognition in many parts of the world that this imposes moral or ethical obligations on the way humans should treat animals. The Treaty of Lisbon agreed to by the European Union in 2009, for example, includes this language from article 13:
In formulating
and implementing the Union's agriculture, fisheries, transport, internal
market, research and technological development and space policies, the Union
and the Member States shall, since animals are sentient beings, pay full regard
to the welfare requirements of animals, while respecting the legislative or
administrative provisions and customs of the Member States relating in
particular to religious rites, cultural traditions and regional heritage.[3]
The broad exception here is unfortunate, but nevertheless, here is
language that expressly recognizes that animals are sentient beings and that this
fact imposes obligations and limitations on humans. Europa (the official web site of the European
Union) explains the significance of this language this way: “This puts animal
welfare on equal footing with other key principles mentioned in the same title
i.e. promote gender equality, guarantee social protection, protect human
health, combat discrimination, promote sustainable development, ensure consumer
protection, protect personal data.”[4]
I find myself asking
this question, again: “Hello? Church? Are you there?” The question in the title of this post, Are
Church Leaders Sentient?, is, of course, intended to ask whether the church and
its leaders are aware of what is
happening around them, of how the world is advancing scientifically and ethically
while the church gets left behind in this critical element of understanding
what it means to be human and to exercise power ethically and with mercy.
The God in Whose image we are made reaches ever outward,
inviting us into relationship, yet the church largely supports a human culture
that constantly looks inward, denying that our fellow creatures are capable of
relationship. And we do it mostly because
to do otherwise would be inconvenient or because we don’t consider animal
suffering important enough to take up our precious time.
In many cases, of
course, the church is silent because the leadership really is just unaware of the issue of animal
welfare. Trying to raise this issue
within the church – or a local parish, however, does require overcoming the
real roadblocks of inconvenience and perceived insignificance. As I continue to ponder ways to get the
church to grasp what we know about animals, the realities of how we treat them,
and the implications of that for who we are as people of God, I leave you with
references to two more recent articles about animal sentience, demonstrating
that this remains a topic of public interest, and the titles of two books I
learned of the at the conference that I am very much looking forward to
reading:
The first article is
from Modern Farmer magazine, addressing the intelligence of pigs: Pigheaded:How Smart Are Swine?
The second is from the
Washington Post regarding whether lobsters and other invertebrates feel pain:
Do Lobsters And Other Invertebrates Feel Pain? New Research Has Some Answers
The second is Dragon Songs by Vladimir Dinets, Ph.D. regarding what turns out to be the
remarkable lives of crocodiles and alligators.
Those of us who care
about animals and their suffering and happiness, and those of us who recognize
that how we behave toward those without power shapes who we are as human beings
and as people in relationship with God, need to be creative and persistent in
raising this as an issue the church must address. Eventually, we will make the church “aware.”
Photo credits:
Prairie dogs: By U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Headquarters (prairie dogs kiss Uploaded by Dolovis) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Clown fish: By Jenny (JennyHuang) from Taipei (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Photo credits:
Prairie dogs: By U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Headquarters (prairie dogs kiss Uploaded by Dolovis) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
Clown fish: By Jenny (JennyHuang) from Taipei (Flickr) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons
[1] Definition of “sentient:” from
Mirriam-Webster’s online dictionary: (1)
responsive to or conscious of sense impressions <sentient beings>;
(2) aware; (3)
finely sensitive in perception or feeling. Example: sentient
of the danger posed by the approaching hurricane.
[2] Balcombe, Jonathan. Second Nature. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, p. 31. Balcombe was also a speaker at the
conference. It is important to note here
that intelligence is far from the only measure of sentience, I highlight here
by way of example. There are many other
ways to be aware of the world. As Jeremy
Bentham observed so long ago, the salient question for our obligations toward
animals is whether and how they suffer. Today we can add to that whether and how they
are happy.
[3] Europa, official website
of the European Union, Health and Consumers page: http://ec.europa.eu/food/animal/welfare/policy/index_en.htm
[4] Id. Thus, for example, the EU has banned the continuous use of
gestation crates and the use of battery cages.
1 comment:
Glad you went to the conference and are learning all this to share with us, Lois, thanks! Look forward to hearing more about the books as you read them should they inspire more for your blog. ~Kathy Dunn
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