•  32
    Contingent Existence, Worthwhile Lives, and Humane Animal Slaughter
    Social Theory and Practice 49 (2): 287-312. 2023.
    Humanely raised farm animals have lives worth living, and their existence is contingent upon human actions. Do these facts render the act of humanely slaughtering such animals permissible? I identify two ethical principles that may seem to connect these facts to the permissibility of humane animal slaughter. The first principle, inspired by the non-identity problem, exonerates some actions that maximize an individual’s well-being, but it is often inapplicable to animal slaughter. The second prin…Read more
  •  35
    Non-conscious Entities Cannot Have Well-Being
    Journal of Value Inquiry 58 (1): 33-52. 2022.
    In this paper, I criticize the view that non-conscious entities—such as plants and bacteria—have well-being. Plausible sources of well-being include pleasure, the satisfaction of consciously held desires, and achievement. Since nonconscious entities cannot obtain well-being from these sources, the most plausible source of well-being for them is the exercise of natural capacities. Plants and bacteria, for example, certainly do exercise natural capacities. But I argue that exercising natural capac…Read more
  •  31
    Genealogical Relationships Do Not Support Indirect Speciesism
    Journal of Animal Ethics 9 (2): 143-157. 2019.
    In this article, I will identify an argument for the conclusion that all human moral agents have stronger moral reasons regarding other human beings than they do regarding nonhuman animals, and I will explain why I think this argument is unsound. The argument employs an empirical claim, that all human beings are more closely genealogically related to all other humans than they are to any nonhuman animals, and a moral claim, that one’s genealogical relationship to an individual is a morally relev…Read more