Summary: The Importance of End-of-Life Welfare | Browning & Veit
By Vasco Grilođ¸ @ 2022-04-22T10:19 (+7)
This post is a summary of the article The Importance of End-of-Life Welfare from Heather Browning and Walter Veit. Any errors/misinterpretations are my own.
Arguments
Instrumental value of lifeâs shape
- âIndividuals will experience some events differently, based on what has preceded themâ âas a result of interaction effectsâ (âprior eventsâ create âanticipation, expectations, and memoriesâ).
- âMany animals have been shown to display behavioural signs of anticipationâ.
- âA human preference for particular life shapes may be, at least in part, due to a preference for control over oneâs circumstancesâ.
- âThis also appears to be true for animals other than humans, where animals show changes in behavioural and physiological responsesâ in response to ânovelty, suddenness, predictability, control, and confirmation with prior expectationâ.
The value of the trend of change
- âIt is a common intuition in thinking about human wellbeing that it is better to have a life that begins poorly but ends well, rather than a life that begins well but ends poorlyâ.
- âThe trend of change is particularly relevant to agricultural animals, given that the experience of most (if not all) of these animals is of a life that goes particularly badly at its endâ.
Internal importance of the trend of change
- âFor humans, this value arises primarily through the narrative importance they place on the âstoryâ of their own lifeâ.
- This âdoes not seem important for the animal case, as animals are unlikely to have such meaningful relations between the events of their livesâ.
- âWeaker sense of the relational view in which the preference is merely for good events to follow bad ones, rather than for a stronger narrative cohesionâ.
- âWork that has demonstrated that animals appear to demonstrate frustration when experiencing [downward] shifts in life qualityâ âis potentially indicativeâ of the same phenomena in animals.
External importance of the trend of change
- âA life that starts well and ends badly is taken to be a tragedy, while one that starts badly and ends well a success storyâ.
Additional emotional significance to humans of harms occurring at the end of life
- âAs humans, we have an even stronger negative reaction to the thought of an animal ending its life in suffering than we do to the thought of equivalent suffering occurring at some earlier timeâ.
- Emergence âof palliative care has emphasised the special importance of caring for the dyingâ.
Conclusions
- âAnimals experience during transport and slaughterâ âshould be weighted particularly highly because they occur at the end of lifeâ.
- âSuggestions to remedy this problemâ:
- âPrevention of sufferingâ: e.g. âcampaigning for improved monitoring and enforcement of existing laws and regulations surrounding transport and slaughterâ.
- âPromotion of positive statesâ: e.g. âfood treatsâ, âinvestigation into use of safe pleasure-inducing drugsâ, and âmusicâ.