EA, Veganism and Negative Animal Utilitarianism
Veganism is on the face of it an extremely simple moral philosophy. If Animals have feelings, then eating animals is bad. Duh.
Effective Altruists tend to be people who actually take moral arguments at face value rather than ignoring them, and unsurprisingly many effective altruists are vegan.
But effective altruists also tend to be utilitarians, and as such are likely to want to minimise total animal suffering in aggregate, rather than taking the more deontologist view that you personally shouldn’t cause suffering by eating animals.
So presumably vegan EAs assume that most farmed animals lives aren’t worth living and so better not to eat farmed animals, even though this will cause them never to be raised in the first place.
It seems to me that most wild animals lives are just as terrible as those of farmed animals, especially for the vast majority of animals who give birth to thousands of young of which on average only 2 will ever reach adulthood. Their lives are presumably also not worth living.
As a utilitarian then, it should be far more important to wipe out as many animal habitats as possible rather than avoiding eating a relatively small number of animals by being a vegan.
I’m interested if anyone espouses such negative animal utilitarianism, or if anyone has any responses to it?
The following is the list of titles in the subsection “Animals” on Essays on Reducing Suffering written by Brian Tomasik. As you can see, Brian has written a lot about how wild animal habitats and biomass are affected by various things.
Food animals
Why I Support the Humane Slaughter Association
Does Vegetarianism Make a Difference?
How Much Direct Suffering is Caused by Various Animal Foods?
Comments on Compassion, by the Pound
Is Kosher Slaughter Humane?
Suffering in Animals vs. Humans
Wild-animal suffering
The Importance of Wild-Animal Suffering
Should We Intervene in Nature?
Medicine vs. Deep Ecology
Caring about Animal Suffering
A two-page pamphlet (pdf) on suffering in nature (.txt) (Polish translation)
Intention-Based Moral Reactions Distort Intuitions about Wild Animals
Does the Animal-Rights Movement Encourage Wilderness Preservation?
How Painful Is Death from Starvation or Dehydration?
Wild-animal suffering on The Reality Check podcast
Why Vegans Should Care about Suffering in Nature
Is There More Suffering Than Happiness in Nature? A Reply to Michael Plant
The Movement to Reduce Wild-Animal Suffering (video presentation)
Insects and other invertebrates
The Importance of Insect Suffering
Do Bugs Feel Pain?
Which Stimuli Are Painful to Invertebrates?
How Good or Bad Is the Life of an Insect? (by Simon Knutsson)
How to Kill Bugs Humanely
Speculations on Invertebrate Population Dynamics Relevant to Reducing Suffering
Convert Grass Lawns to Gravel to Reduce Insect Suffering
How Many Springtails Are Created by a Gram of Grass?
Insect Suffering from Silk, Shellac, Carmine, and Other Insect Products
Water Use Often Kills Zooplankton
How to Avoid Hurting Insects (on wikiHow)
Entomophagy
Why I Don’t Support Eating Insects
What’s Wrong with Entomophagy? (a short interview)
Vegans Should Not Eat Insects: A Reply to Fischer (2016)
Eating Insects Is Usually Less Efficient Than Eating Plants
The Cruelty of Eating Snails
Welfare biology
Applied Welfare Biology and Why Wild-Animal Advocates Should Focus on Not Spreading Nature
How Does Vegetarianism Impact Wild-Animal Suffering?
Estimating Aggregate Wild-Animal Suffering from Reproductive Age and Births per Female
How Does Killing Animals Affect Total Suffering in a Simple, Food-Limited Population?
Net Primary Productivity by Land Type
How Forest Fires Affect Wild-Animal Suffering
Will Gene Drives Reduce Wild-Animal Suffering?
Habitat Loss, Not Preservation, Generally Reduces Wild-Animal Suffering
Reducing Bug Suffering (video presentation)
Cost-Effectiveness Comparison for Different Ways to Reduce Insect Suffering
Efforts to Help Wild Animals Should Be Effective, Not Idealistic
How Eutrophication Affects Freshwater Invertebrate Populations
Numbers of wild animals
How Many Wild Animals Are There?
Abundances of Soil Organisms
Zooplankton Densities in Lakes and Reservoirs
Zooplankton Densities in Rivers
Humanity’s impact on wild-animal abundance
Humanity’s Net Impact on Wild-Animal Suffering
Humanity’s Impact on the Aggregate Metabolism of Land Wild Animals: An Analysis of Krausmann et al. (2013)
Does the Against Malaria Foundation Reduce Invertebrate Suffering?
Crop cultivation
Crop Cultivation and Wild Animals
Why Lower Crop Yields Reduce Invertebrate Suffering (Given Certain Assumptions)
How Irrigation Affects Global Net Primary Productivity
Humane Insecticides
Fishing
One Trillion Fish
How Wild-Caught Fishing Affects Wild-Animal Suffering
Should Fishing Opponents Be Happy about Overfishing?
Which Marine Trophic Level Contains the Most Total Suffering?
Trophic Cascades Caused by Fishing
Cattle grazing
How Cattle Grazing Affects Insect Populations on Pasture Fields
How Cattle Grazing Affects Pasture Productivity
Environmental Impacts of Cattle Beyond the Pasture
How Rainforest Beef Production Affects Wild-Animal Suffering
Net Impact of Vegetarianism on Factory-Farm Suffering vs. Invertebrates on Pasture Fields
The Fine Print on Beef’s Water Use
Climate change
Climate Change and Wild Animals
Effects of CO2 and Climate Change on Terrestrial Net Primary Productivity
Scenarios for Very Long-Term Impacts of Climate Change on Wild-Animal Suffering
Food scraps
Which Food-Waste Disposal Options Create the Least Invertebrate Suffering?
Invertebrates Created by Throwing Out Food Scraps
Invertebrates Created by Composting
Invertebrate Suffering Caused by Worm Composting
Invertebrate Impacts of Worm-Bin Composting vs. Methane-Producing Decomposition
Invertebrate-Free Composting
Wastewater
Zooplankton Created by a Facultative Aerated Wastewater Treatment Lagoon: An Analysis of Kring et al. (2013)
Microorganisms Created by Septic Systems
Microorganisms Created by Wastewater-Treatment Systems
The old Star Trek’s Prime Directive is a good guideline: don’t mess with something you didn’t create and can’t calculate the effects on. In general, remember the guardrails: any drastic action is bad by default, even if you can’t prove how and it looks great to your boundedly rational brain. Utilitarianism together with decompartmentalization are guaranteed to lead you astray, and recognizing your own limitations is the most important lesson of rationality, and also the one we fail the most. Scott A’s recent review https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/book-review-what-we-owe-the-future (and many others before and after) is a good lesson in humbleness.
Basically, any time you have a bright idea to change the world for the better with some sweeping actions, the odds are exponential in “sweepiness” against the outcome being net positive.
A story using this premise: https://alicorn.elcenia.com/stories/dogs.shtml
I switched from veganism to eating small amounts of pasture raised meat for these reasons.
The lives of well treated livestock do seem to be a net positive and considerably better on average than those of wild animals. Less stress, less suffering, quick and painless death.
There are some arguments for reforesting/rewilding pasture land, but even if this were done populations of large herbivores still need to be controlled.
One way to do this is reintroduce wolves, which I’m not against, but I still think death by human is the more humane option.
It doesn’t many much sense to me to say it’s bad for humans to kill and eat animals humanely so instead condemn them to be torn apart by wolves!
Wolves don’t seem to have any capability to morally introspect. Do you agree with this?
If you do, it seems silly to expect them to behave morally. Humans, on the other hand, can behave morally, at least on average.
There is no such thing as “well-treated livestock.” If you think this is incorrect, devise a livestock method behind the veil of ignorance and share it here. But generally murder is not well-treatment. Rape is not well-treatment. If you were a farmed animal, you would have been murdered at the age of seven, extrapolating from the average age of farmed animal murder as a percentage of lifespan. Do you think it is okay to murder a seven-year-old assuming it is painless? If you were murdered at seven, would you consider it a life well-lived? Would you prefer to be slaughtered “painlessly” at age seven, or perhaps live longer and be killed by wolves?
Not to be inflammatory, but I don’t believe that the reasons for your abandoning veganism actually were these. It is far too convenient. You probably just wanted to taste meat again. If you have some health excuse, I recommend blending your meat into a tasteless, drinkable slurry to avoid these arguments—and if you really did abandon veganism simply because you’re hopeless about the wild animal’s suffering, you should be happy to do this! If it isn’t about your ability to eat meat, that is. If it is, you should be honest and say you abandoned veganism because you enjoy the taste of blood in your mouth.
Are you a wolf? Come on.
No, but that’s because you’re sneaking in extra connotations in “a life well-lived”: those words implicitly compare to the current distribution of human lives, and most humans get to live much longer than seven. Let’s replace those words by the actual issue here: “If you were murdered at seven, would you consider your life as a whole better than not having existed at all?”; my answer becomes yes.
No, but that’s because you’ve completely ignored the quality-of-life angle. “Well-treated livestock” would be fed and sheltered and never fear wolves their whole lives; the difference isn’t only the age at which they’re killed. Now maybe you think their life isn’t more pleasant, or that living a longer and less pleasant life is still better than a shorter pleasant one, but the way you’ve phrased the question ignores those issues.
Yes, we should drastically change nature’s status quo so that lives of wild animals (or any sentient creatures) are filled with positive experiences, worth living, pleasant, eudaimonic, etc… but only once we have enough technological capacity and gears-level understanding of the system we are dealing with. Needless to say, we are far from that. Also, our (i.e. human civilization’s) survival and progress still depends on the environment remaining mostly as it is and there is still a lot of useful knowledge to be uncovered from studying it in a relatively nonperturbing way.
I think it’s not clear at all that the average animal in the wild has a life of net negative utility, nor do I think it’s clear that the average present-day human has a life of net positive utility.
If you compare the two, wild animals probably have more gruesome deaths and starve more, but most of the time they might be happier than the average human since they live in an environment they evolved to live in.
Most animals to which this applies probably don’t have the cognitive capacity to be upset by this. It just means that in those species, the vast majority of lives are short and end by being eaten by some other animal. From a human perspective this sounds terrible, but I don’t think it’s obvious at all that the net utility of these lives is negative (and I just mean the first person experience, not eco-system effects or anything like that).
David Pearce has a plan to genetically engineer wild animals to experience only “gradients of bliss” instead of a pleasure-pain axis, effectively eliminating suffering from their lives, while preserving their outward behavior. You might find his site interesting: https://www.hedweb.com/
Hey Yair, I would highly suggest reading the Brian Tomasik articles under Lukas Gloor’s comment on this. But you may also be interested in articles discussing ‘[Logic of the Larder](https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/topics/logic-of-the-larder)’. Initially when used would suggest cases of farmed animal welfare being directly positive, the farmed animals have a life better than not worth living. However, with time it has also been used to discuss that farmed animal land-use is counter-factually positive for animals on-net.
There have been discussions of the suffering of wild animals. David Pearce discusses this, see one of the other comment threads. Some other starting points:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_animal_suffering
https://reducing-suffering.org/#wild-animal_suffering
>As a utilitarian then, it should be far more important to wipe out as many animal habitats as possible rather than avoiding eating a relatively small number of animals by being a vegan.
To utilitarians, there are other considerations in assessing the value of wiping out animal habitats, like the effect of such habitats on global warming.
You’re ignoring an important aspect. Humans directly cause the suffering of farmed animals. It could be more important to eliminate the rape and murder humans directly inflict on farmed animals prior to optimizing the wild ecosystem. For example, there could be other negative utility from social technologies/institutions around industrialized animal rape and murder. I see the Holocaust as one such example of what those who rape and murder nonhumans will eventually (and inevitably) do to humans.