Ethics of Animal Use
The ethics of animal use examines the moral evaluation of practices that employ animals, including food production, scientific research, and other uses, and the principles proposed to govern them.
Definition
The branch of animal ethics concerned with the moral assessment of human practices that use animals.
Scope
This topic covers applied debates over using animals for food (including intensive farming), for biomedical and other research (including the '3Rs' framework of replacement, reduction, and refinement), and for further purposes such as entertainment and labor. It also covers how rights, welfare, and utilitarian frameworks bear on these practices. It describes the arguments, principles, and points of contention rather than advising on consumption, research, or policy.
Core questions
- Under what conditions, if any, is using animals for food morally permissible?
- How should the benefits of animal research be weighed against the costs to animals?
- What do principles such as the 3Rs require, and are they sufficient?
- Do different ethical frameworks converge or diverge on these practices?
Key theories
- The 3Rs framework
- Russell and Burch's principles of replacement, reduction, and refinement, which propose replacing animal use where possible, reducing the number of animals used, and refining procedures to minimize suffering.
- Utilitarian assessment of animal use
- Singer applies equal consideration of interests to argue that many uses of animals causing significant suffering for relatively minor human benefit cannot be justified.
History
The 3Rs framework, introduced by Russell and Burch in 1959, became foundational to laboratory-animal ethics and regulation. Singer's Animal Liberation (1975) brought intensive farming and animal experimentation to wide public and philosophical attention, and Bernard Rollin contributed influentially to research-animal ethics and policy.
Debates
- Whether the 3Rs are adequate
- Supporters see the 3Rs as a workable, widely adopted ethical and regulatory framework, while critics argue that minimizing harm within continued use does not address whether using animals at all is justified.
Key figures
- William Russell
- Rex Burch
- Peter Singer
- Bernard Rollin
Related topics
Seminal works
- russell1959
- singer1975
Frequently asked questions
- What are the '3Rs' in animal research?
- Replacement (using non-animal methods where possible), reduction (using fewer animals), and refinement (minimizing suffering). They are a widely used framework in research ethics and regulation.
- Does this topic take a position on eating animals?
- No. It presents the arguments and frameworks that different thinkers apply to practices such as farming and research, without recommending any particular choice.