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IEET > Rights > Personhood > Vision > Technoprogressivism > Directors > George Dvorsky

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What do we mean by the “rights” of the nonhuman person?


George Dvorsky
George Dvorsky
Sentient Developments

Posted: Mar 22, 2011

A common objection I get to the suggestion that nonhuman persons should be granted human-level rights is the concern that these animals could never properly express their citizenship or take part in the social contract. I’ve actually had people ask me if it’s my intention to give bonobos a credit card and the right to vote.

No, no, no — that’s not what this is all about. The rights I’m talking about have to do with protections. Nonhuman animals, like humans, should be immune from undue confinement, abuse, experimentation, illicit trafficking, and the threat of unnatural death. And I’m inclined to leave it at that for now.

While these animals may not be as intelligent or knowledgeable as humans, their cognitive and emotional capacities are sophisticated enough to warrant special consideration. These are self-aware and self-reflexive animals. They are cognizant of other minds, exhibit deep emotional responses, and have profound social attachments. That’s not to be taken lightly.

At the same time I acknowledge that there there has to be a realism applied to this issue. Nonhuman animals who qualify as persons cannot participate in society to the same degree that humans can. Thus, they should be considered and treated in the same manner that we do children and the developmentally disabled—which is that they still have rights! We would never experiment upon a 3-year old human child, nor would we force a mentally disabled person to perform in a circus. We believe this because we recognize that these individuals are endowed with (or have the potential for) the sufficient capacities required for personhood. Consequently, we protect them with laws.

Along similar lines, another objection is that animals who lack a moral understanding of their actions cannot be included in the broader social contract. Again, this argument is unpersuasive. Never minding children and the developmentally disabled, human sociopaths lack a moral understanding of their actions, yet we include them in our charter of rights and freedoms—unless they break the law, in which case they are imprisoned or treated for their disorder. But at no times are they stripped of their fundamental human rights. While imprisoned, sociopaths are no longer allowed to co-mingle with the rest of society, but they can still count on the state to protect them from such things as torture or undue process.

These distinctions are important, particularly if we are to get popular buy-in on this concept. Granting human-level rights is fundamentally about protections; for the time being we shouldn’t interpret or extend it beyond that. At the same time however, we need to acknowledge the importance of personhood status. Anything can be protected with the right set of laws. What’s crucially important here, however, is understanding the moral weight that personhood status carries. To kill a nonhuman person, for example, should be en par with murdering a human—and with it all the consequences of committing such an act.

So while we can talk of these rights as basic protections, they are also poised to serve as a set of negative rights for humans who have the capacity to morally comprehend their actions and who are capable of participating in the social contract. Simply put, there are just some things you cannot do to persons, human or otherwise.


George Dvorsky serves as Chair of the IEET Board of Directors and also heads our Rights of Non-Human Persons program. George produces Sentient Developments blog and podcast.
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COMMENTS


excellent essay.
Especially after having just watched the head transplant video, I think extending protections is as much about protecting human rights as animal rights. Disbabled people and infant clones would also benefit if protection rights aren’t based simply on capacity but on a recognition of innate rights.
I think pushback is going to come on three fronts: from industries with financial interests (e.g. food industry, entertainment industry), objection to the term “personhood” and being able to distinguish some animals from others.
Are we asking for human-level rights or human-level protections?
Information theory/thermodynamics would suggest that all life has a form of consciousness. How do we distinguish? Is it based on specifically naming some species for whom we have data about brain activity, social structure, etc. or are we looking to develop a definition?
Thanks for this.





Yes, thank you.  Excellent essay. And dor is correct, the pushback will come from those with economic interests.  Just like it did with slavery.  It’s about human-level protections based on a level of sentience that is undeniably close to human.





“It’s about human-level protections based on a level of sentience that is undeniably close to human. “
It is only undeniable if you already believe it to be true. The challenge is in establishing a clear definition that can not be used to erode human rights and in presenting evidence that connects at an emotional as well as intellectual level. A definition that is too broad will be used for ridicule so that those who might be sympathetic will never even hear the message.
I’m a speciesist (not proud of it, but I’ve got to be honest). For me, there is a difference between raising an animal for food vs. experimenting on an ape. For me the urgency in this is preventing human exploitation by protecting those species whose brains are close enough to human to be used nefariously for either research or development purposes and to establish human rights/human protections that are not intellect based.
That said, I also believe that testing on animals that are as intelligent or more intelligent than humans is cruel and immoral. My issue with human-non-human neural chimera, for example, is the potential for the animal to become self-aware and therefore existentially as well as physically harmed which crosses a line into torture. That, too, is the case against highly intelligent animals being captive for entertainment:they are aware of their situation and that leads to emotional and psychological anguish.
Ideally all sentience would be protected from cruelty, but that is not the charge of this project. How do we define it specifically enough as to be a no-brainer while simultaneously communicating *without question* that this does not denigrate the stature of human?





There is only one way to achieve success for animal rights, and that is to adopt a philosophy of non-harm and respect for all life, terrestrial or other. Assigning personhood status and rights with a species by species strategy will take eons, and yet still falls way short of the goal of non-harm.

I was raised to respect all life, with a healthy home education and interest in nature documentaries. I have been a vegetarian for more than a decade, and am now completely dairy free, and one more step closer to veganism. All of this was an ethical choice and involved no personal pain nor discomfort nor inconvenience.

There is no magic or mysticism involved here, no complication nor dilemma, “just do it” (Nike).

@ George.. As a Buddhist it surprises me that you do not profess for non-harm as fundamental philosophy? Merely protesting for Personhood and certain species is a distraction from the real goal?





Discussing the social contract and all these man-made theoretical underpinning of protected rights is essentially intellectual hooey in the case of trying to protect great apes from torturous abuse.  What really matters is whether we are open-minded enough as a society to see the intellectual capabilities of great apes and more importantly, are we compassionate enough to, after recognizing their intellectual capacity for suffering - grant protections to remove and ward off unnecessary suffering to our fellow planetary inhabitants.

Unfortunately, perhaps because we were at one point destined to eat animals (at least for a period of time) we have put up a cold-callousness towards all other sentient beings (and non-sentient life).  Or perhaps more accurately, today we simply pretend cruelty doesn’t really exist.  Our meat is more of just another commodity than an animal’s flesh.

Ultimately what will matter in getting society to recognize rights for non-human persons will be to get to their hearts.





Yes, an excellent article from Dvorsky, as well as thought provoking responses.

Hopefully, progress and success in respect of (non-human) animal rights will not take as long as CygnusX1 suggests.

Historically, institutionalised slavery of African men and women seems to have collapsed relatively soon after organised opposition to it emerged in the late 18th century.

Maybe our efforts on behalf of non-human animals will similarly soon bring the whole rotten structure tumbling down.





I don’t agree with Jeremy that discussion of the theoretical underpinning of protective rights is “intellectual hooey”. Whether we are sufficiently open-minded and compassionate as a society will depend in part on the extent to which those of us who care about such things have clarified these theoretical underpinnings.
From my utilitarian perspective it is crucially important to clarify whose happiness we are trying to maximize, and what kind of rules (such as allocation of rights) are necessary to achieve this. I’m not disagreeing that it’s important to get to people’s hearts as well, but this should not be used as an argument against careful ethical reasoning.





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