Animal Suffering and the Laws of Nature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
…a capacity for pain would not of itself produce pain if it weren’t for something else, namely the world’s being governed by general laws; and this seems to be in no way necessary for a very perfect being. It is true that if each thing that happens were caused by an individual volition on God’s part, the course of nature would be perpetually broken, there would be no dependable regularities, and so no man could employ his reason in the conduct of life. But if some such volitions threatened to have that effect, mightn’t other particular volitions remedy this inconvenience? In short, might not God exterminate all misfortune, wherever it was to be found, and make everything all good, through judiciously placed individual volitions, and thus without any preparation or long chains of causes and effects?
2. Incompatibility Arguments
1. There are two animals in the doghouse.
Clearly, (1) and (2) could both be true, so they are logically compatible. But if we add a probe which is, let us suppose, contingently true, a problem arises:2. All the animals in the doghouse are mammals.
The set consisting of (1), (2) and (3) is inconsistent. Since the probe itself should play no role in generating the contradiction, we erroneously seem to have indicted (1) and (2) of incompatibility, even though we know they are compatible. We have a false positive indicating logical incompatibility. So, not just any proposition will do as a probe in the derivation of an explicit contradiction. A necessarily true proposition is required.3. There is an odd number of mammals in the doghouse.
and,4. God exists,
could be true. Recall that a model need not consist of true propositions. A theodicy is often taken to mean a plausible account of moral reasons which would justify God in permitting the evils found in the world. Theodicies are more ambitious than defenses, as they aim for plausibility, while the latter aim for compatibility. In addition to defenses and theodicies there are, of course, refutations. Simply put, refutations are nothing more than objections to specific arguments. Refutations proceed along either of two broad routes. Arguing that a premise of the target argument is false, or at least, not well supported; or, arguing that the premises of the target argument do not support its conclusion. As regards responses to the problem of evil, refutations are less ambitious than a defense, as they seek only to show that a particular atheistic argument is unsound. Refutations attempt no justification for the appalling suffering we see around us, nor do they seek to demonstrate compatibility. The argument of this paper is a refutation of two atheistic arguments from evil. Theodicies and defenses are left to others.5. Evil occurs,
3. Three Assumptions
This is a peculiar assumption as it is obviously false. For example, humans have the causal power to fatigue themselves but a superior being of the sort worshipped by theists, an agent who is omnipotent, could not fatigue himself.8 Or again, humans have the causal power to engage in moral wrongdoing, but a morally perfect being could not.9 An omniscient being could not inadvertently bring about an unintended consequence, while humans obviously can. The relevance of (ASP-1) as regards the problem of evil is found with the idea of an outweighing good or justifying reason that plays a role in discussions of the argument from evil. If there is a justifying reason for God to allow an evil E, then either God is within his moral rights allowing E, or there is some good, that outweighs E, and requires that God allow E. Indeed, there may be suffering that is within a human’s power but not within God’s to prevent without the loss of an outweighing good (Wykstra 1984, pp. 75–76). For example, there will be evils, theists insist, that God must permit if humans are to have the opportunity themselves to prevent evil. With this in mind, we see that an improvable world could be among the best possible worlds as there could be evils which humans could prevent that God cannot prevent, but which humans fail to prevent. Additionally, if (ASP-1) were true, then every version of the soul-making theodicy will fail. We can understand soul-making as, in large part, moral development. The idea is that humans must have the opportunity and freedom to mature morally, as individuals, via the prevention or amelioration of the suffering of others. Moral maturation requires actions on the part of humans, as, for example, in the cultivation of moral virtues, such as charity, bravery or kindness. One may be disposed toward charity but without engaging in charitable actions, one will not have the virtue of being charitable. Indeed, moral maturity and human soul-making require actions that seek to provide relief to a sufferer but are costly to the moral agent. Contemporary discussion of soul-making theodicies began with John Hick in the 1960s (Hick 1966). While soul-making presumably involves more than moral maturation, I will emphasize moral development in what follows.ASP-1: it is likely that God can do X if humans have the causal power to do X.7
Given our reasons for denying (ASP-1), we have good reason for denying (ASP-2) as well. Additionally, suppose it is a divine goal in creation that humans would have the opportunity to make a real difference in the amount of value in the universe, say by their choices and actions in forming their characters. If God allows the moral space necessary for the determination of one’s character, think of the soul-making theodicy, then God’s power would be limited by that divine goal.ASP-2: It is improbable that God’s power is ever limited.
This assumption is false as moral evil results not just from immoral actions and choices but can also result from the morally permissible and rationally optimal actions of persons. To see this, let us adapt a case from Robert Nozick (Nozick 1974, p. 263). Suppose we have a world with twenty-six males, named: A, B, C, D and so on down to Z. In this world there are also twenty-six females, named conveniently: A’, B’, C’, D’ and so on down to Z’. The males are ranked from A (the highest) to Z (the lowest) by their possession of traits found desirous by females, and all agree on the ranking. So, A has the greatest aggregate of those traits, B has the second most, C the third most and so on down to Z who has the least amount. The same is true of the females, as A’ has the greatest aggregate of those traits desirous to males, B’ the second most, C’ the third, and so on down to Z’ who has the least. Again, all agree on the ranking. Persons have the freedom and right in this world to choose whether to marry and with whom they marry. All wish to marry. Naturally, A is the most attractive to the females, while A’ is the most attractive to the males. Unsurprisingly, to the bitter disappointment and unhappiness of the rest of the population, A and A’ marry. Left with their second choice, B and B’ voluntarily marry; and so on down to Z and Z’. There has been no wrongdoing in this world, and no suboptimal decision, yet unhappiness, disappointment, frustration, heartbreak, and perhaps even despair, all intrinsically undesirable states, may all be present.10 So, even though there is moral evil present, contrary to (ASP-3), it is not suffering brought about by wrongdoing.ASP-3: Moral evil occurs only because persons engage in morally impermissible, or rationally suboptimal, decisions or actions, or negligent inactions.
4. Constrained Intervention and Animal Suffering
6. for any moral agent S, S is morally required to prevent all the significant or
horrendous natural evil that she can when doing so harms no human and causes
Although not explicit in (6), the principle should be understood as incorporating an order of application such that political states have the immediate duty of preventing significant or horrendous natural evil, and individual humans have that duty only when political states have failed to act. God would be required to act if political states and individuals have failed to prevent a particular instance of significant or horrendous suffering. This order of application ensures that individual humans could engage in soul-making actions. Sterba holds that (6) is binding on any moral agent, whether individual human, political state, or God.no greater harm to animals.
6’. for any moral agent S, S is morally required to prevent all the significant or
horrendous natural evil that she can when doing so harms no human and
causes no greater harm to animals and allows for the opportunity of
Sterba recognizes with (6’) and the other natural evil prevention moral requirements, that the creation of perverse incentives is ripe (Sterba 2019, pp. 163–64). The creation of perverse incentives is an instance of the phenomenon of unintended consequences. Unlike perverse incentives, not every unintended consequence is undesirable or negative for the agent or others, so “undesired effects are not always undesirable effects” (Merton 1936, pp. 894–904). Perverse incentives however are not just undesired and unforeseen, but, importantly, undesirable for the agent. Every unintended consequence of an agent’s actions, which is undesirable for the agent, is a case of self-sabotage. Self-sabotage occurs when one’s plans or behaviors backfire, whether foreseen or not. If God were to act every time that humans failed to prevent a case of significant or horrendous suffering, by ending the suffering, a pattern would be detectable. With a detectable pattern, an incentive for humans to forgo seeking to prevent significant or horrendous suffering would loom—why take taxing steps to bring about a certain event X if one can ensure that X obtains by simply doing nothing? If human moral maturity and soul-making are divine goals, then a constant intervention to mitigate significant or horrendous suffering whenever political states and individual humans have failed to act would create a perverse incentive, as it would incentivize persons to forego costly moral actions, thus, undercutting the presumed divine goal. Sterba attempts to defuse the threat of perverse incentives via his idea of constrained intervention (Sterba 2019, pp. 163–64).soul-making.
CI-1: For any significant or horrendous natural evil E preventable by S, if S can
successfully prevent E and does so, then God does not intervene.
CI-2: If S seeks to prevent E but has only partial success, then God would
intervene and successfully finish what S had started.
CI-3: If S does not seek to prevent E, assuming that God will prevent E, then
Divine intervention then is not morally required on every occasion, but only when the created agent’s efforts fall short of preventing all the significant or horrendous suffering. But when a human yields to the temptation of letting God do all the work and thereby takes no action to prevent suffering, God would rescue only some of those threatened. The differential between (CI-2) and (CI-3) is detectable by humans, Sterba holds, and would motivate humans, or many humans, to do all they can, whether collectively or individually, to prevent or mitigate significant or horrendous natural evil. The idea of constrained intervention might be distilled as:God will prevent only some but not all of E’s bad outcomes.
Proposition (CI) will serve as an implicit premise in Sterba’s external incompatibility argument contra Theism.CI: as regards the prevention of significant or horrendous natural evil, divine action would be calibrated with human efforts as outlined in (CI-1), (CI-2) and (CI-3), to avoid any perverse incentive if God exists.
6’. for any moral agent S, S is morally required to prevent all the significant or
horrendous natural evil that she can when doing so harms no human and causes
no greater harm to animals and allows for the opportunity of soul-making. So,
7. Constrained intervention is morally required of God. But,
8. Constrained intervention is obviously not operative as there are many instances of significant or horrendous animal suffering that God could prevent without harming humans or other animals. So,
Given the idea of constrained intervention, Sterba’s argument presents a formidable challenge to theistic belief.9. God does not exist.
5. Animal Suffering and “God-Willing” Laws
10. Animals suffer. And,
11. No animal is a moral agent. And,
12. Only moral agents can deserve to suffer. So,
13. No animal deserves to suffer. And,
14. Humans do not have souls. And,
15. No human or animal now alive is identical with any that had previously died. So,
16. Soul-making theodicies cannot explain the suffering of animals. And,
17. We have good scientific accounts of the natural mechanisms that cause natural evil. And,
18. These accounts do not involve any agent causing natural evil. So,
19. The suffering of animals is case of genuine natural evil. And,
20. The prevention of the suffering of animals would not impede human freedom. And,
21. The prevention of the natural evil of animal suffering does not require the loss of regular and predictable laws, or the hiddenness of God. So,
Part one of Tooley’s argument is extremely ambitious as it would be sound only if several major philosophical problems have been solved. For example, proposition (14) implies that Cartesian dualism is false. Proposition (15) implies that reincarnation doctrines of afterlife are all false. Proposition (20) is curious as it would be an odd world in which humans enjoy the range of freedom that they do in the actual world yet cannot harm any animal even when they freely choose to do so.22. No “natural religion” theodicy or defense provides a satisfactory answer to this incompatibility argument.
Proposition (21) rests in part on premises (17) and (18). These premises assert that science generates knowledge that implies no agent causing what otherwise appears as natural evil. Put another way, (17) asserts that science gives us no reason to think that natural evil is nothing but moral evil incognito, while (18) holds that science gives us to reason to think that natural evil is not reducible to moral evil. We should not overlook Tooley’s appeal to science in (17) and (18), as those two premises entail that science and human inquiry are sufficiently competent to discover that no agent is causing what otherwise appears as purely natural forces resulting in natural evil. Put another way, we can know that the law-like regular and predictable operations observed in nature are laws of nature and not the particular volitions or actions of agents.a being who knows the secret workings of the universe might easily, by particular volitions, turn all these happenings to the good of mankind and make the whole world happy, without revealing himself in any operation. A fleet whose purposes were useful to society might always meet with a fair wind. Good rulers might enjoy sound health and long life. Persons born to power and authority might be endowed with good temperaments and virtuous dispositions. A few outcomes such as these, regularly and wisely brought about, would change the face of the world; and yet they would no more seem to disturb the course of nature or thwart human conduct than does the present arrangement of things where the causes are secret, and variable, and complex.
Whenever a natural event of type F happens, and God does not will that it not
be followed by an event of type G, the event of type F will causally give rise to
A “god-willing” law is not a natural law if by a natural law is meant a law describing only natural forces and natural causation and incorporates no theological condition. A “god-willing” law may be regular and predictable and, in those ways, mimic laws of nature, but a “god-willing” law is not a natural law, as a “god-willing” law contains a theological condition stipulating a divine volition.19 Tooley holds that human investigators very probably could neither discover nor detect that regular and predictable laws are in fact “god-willing” rather than natural laws:an event of type G.
Unlike Sterba’s discoverable divine constrained intervention, Tooley holds that humans lack the competency to detect divine volition or divine activity. In this way, Tooley seeks to argue that in a God created world, God could bring it about that both that there would be no natural evil and could have done so without sacrificing science.If there were an omnipotent and omniscient being, all of the suffering and deaths due to natural disasters and to viruses and diseases could have been prevented if such a being so chose… No human person would ever know that this had been done unless the deity chose to communicate that fact to humans. An appeal to the claimed desirability of the hiddenness of God does nothing to block, accordingly, any well-formulated version of the argument from evil.
6. Conclusions
A. The opportunity for humans to discover, generate, and disseminate knowledge, including scientific knowledge, would be a plausible divine goal in creation, in addition to the divine goal that humans can morally develop.
A1. If the opportunity for humans to discover, generate, and disseminate scientific knowledge is a divine goal, then the world could not be a world that operates on particular divine volitions rather than regular and general natural laws.
A2. A world with regularities and laws of nature as complex as that of the actual world is not surprising if the opportunity for humans to discover, generate, and disseminate scientific knowledge is a divine goal.23
A3. Given (A), (A1) and (A2), natural evil is not surprising.
B. For any person S, and any amount of evil, e, if e seems appropriate or just right for divine purposes, such that any amount less than e or greater than e would seem insufficient or excessive, then S has a reason to neither mitigate nor prevent any evil.
B1. Given (B), natural evil that seems excessive is not surprising.
At most, the foregoing has provided some support of (A1). The problem of natural evil remains a formidable challenge to a theistic commitment even if the arguments of Sterba and Tooley contribute little to that challenge.24C. Given (A)—(B1), that the distribution of evil is ambiguous is not surprising.
Funding
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Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | While we focus on the suffering of nonhuman animals (hereafter: animals) in this essay, one should not identify natural evil with animal suffering. |
2 | One could add any other theistic traditions to this intersection as appropriate. |
3 | Hereafter I will employ “theism” for Classical Theism. |
4 | By desirability of divine hiddenness is meant, roughly, the idea that there is good reason for God to hide or mask the fact that God exists in order to bring about or preserve an important good (if God exists). |
5 | P and Q take opposite truth-values just in case whenever P is true, Q is false, and whenever Q is true, P is false. |
6 | A necessary truth is a proposition true in every possible world—that is, true no matter the variation of the world or in the world. |
7 | The modality of the “can” in (ASP-1) should be understood as logical or causal. |
8 | Given that God is essentially omnipotent—that is, in very possible world in which God exists, God is omnipotent. Other counterexamples to (ASP-1): commit suicide, wear Jones’ shoes while Jones is wearing them, weaken himself, and so on. |
9 | Given that God is essentially morally perfect. |
10 | Note that any intrinsically undesirable state, for example pain, no matter the intensity, counts as an evil. |
11 | I owe this objection to an anonymous reviewer. |
12 | Even though the human mind is a product of natural selection, that fact is not relevant as regards the distinction between moral and natural evil. |
13 | Sterba distinguishes two kinds of soul-making. Humans have a right to what he calls “natural soul-making”—basically the opportunity to freely develop moral traits and virtues. To morally mature in other words. |
14 | Studies researching the crime reduction value of CCTV surveillance systems generally show decreases in crime, especially property crimes, although the results are usually reported as preliminary, modest, and in need of further study. For example, see https://www.mtas.tennessee.edu/knowledgebase/there-empirical-evidence-surveillance-cameras-reduce-crime (accessed on 24 July 2022). Interestingly, surveillance systems may not prevent crime, but displace it to locales lacking surveillance systems. See for example: https://www.jstor.org/stable/24737548 (accessed on 24 July 2022). Of course, displacement is indicative of deterrence—if one knows that he is under surveillance in this locale, then one’s behavior is modified until one is in another locale lacking surveillance. Another interesting bit of evidence about the reduction or deterrence effects of surveillance, in addition to CCTV systems, has to do with the opioid epidemic of the past few decades in the U.S. The opioid epidemic began in the 1990s. At the time, only a few states required addictive drug prescriptions to be filed in triplicate—the physician retained a copy of the prescription, the pharmacy kept a copy, and the third copy was posted by the physician to a state regulatory agency. Among the few states requiring triplicate filing were NY, TX and CA—about a 1/3 of the US population. In those states with the triplicate requirement, physicians were less likely to over-prescribe the opioids. And over the next several decades, states without a triplicate requirement suffered far greater addictions and overdoses than the states with a triplicate requirement. The explanation, in part, is that the prescriber, faced with the burden of filing the triplicate prescriptions, and knowing that a state regulatory agency had a copy, were less likely to over-prescribe. They knew that a record existed. Also, the triplicate states were not heavily marketed by the big pharmaceutical companies, pushing opioids, as the big pharmaceutical companies realized beforehand that the triplicate requirement would disincentive aggressive use of opioids. See: https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w26500/w26500.pdf (accessed on 28 July 2022). |
15 | A surveillance state is in effect constantly executing a general warrant allowing agents of the state to inspect any and every space seeking cause for a criminal complaint. General warrants, however, trample the legitimate privacy-interests and liberty-interests that persons enjoy. Consider the Fourth Amendment of The Constitution of the United States. It prohibits general warrants, by requiring particular conditions on warrants:
|
16 | Same as note 11. |
17 | Might this point provide an objection to theism? Some have argued, for example, that the existence of an omniscient being would result in the loss of privacy and autonomy. See, for example, (Kahane 2011). While we cannot argue the point here, one common theistic response contends that the opportunity for autonomy and soul-making requires that the world be religiously ambiguous so as to avoid the threat of a known divine panopticon. See for example (Hick 1966; Murray 1993; Jordan 2008). |
18 | A “god-willing” law would consist in part of two theological conditions describing what would occur if God willed that an event does not result, and what would occur if God willed that an event would result. (Tooley 2019, p. 20). Particular volitions may be law-like but are not properly considered laws. |
19 | Tooley holds that theists are committed to “god-willing” laws insofar as they accept that God has miraculously acted in history (Tooley 2019, p. 18). If Tooley is correct that “interventionist theists” are committed to “god-willing” laws and we retain the standard definition of a miracle, we get a very odd result. If one understands a miracle as an event that violates a law of nature, caused by God, then a miracle would be an event violating what God wills, caused by God. This odd result may sever the alleged commitment. |
20 | Could “god-willing” laws be general and not particular voltions of the divine? The answer is no – the notion of a “god-willing” law is indexed to particular outcomes or events willed by the deity. See (Tooley 2019, p. 18). |
21 | Both Sterba and Tooley hold that universal moral duties would make the individual divine volitions law-like and predictable. While the point cannot be addressed in detail here, arguably they overlook the distinction between agent-relative reasons and agent-neutral reasons. An agent-relative reason is a reason to do something (or refrain from doing something) that a particular agent might have which others lack. For example, parents have an agent-relative reason to save for their child’s college career that others lack. An agent-neutral reason is a reason to do something that all agents would have. For example, morality requires that no one torture for the fun of it. If God exists, would God, qua creator, have agent-relative reasons which humans lack? If so, might those agent-relative reasons include moral permissions as well as moral duties, and, for all we know, override some or all the agent-neutral moral reasons which God would share in common with human agents? Recall that, even if particular divine volitions are law-like, it is contentious to call them “laws” rather than “law-like” reularities or operations. |
22 | For detailed arguments seeking to provide a theodicy regarding animal suffering, see (Murray 2008) and (Schneider 2020). |
23 | Laws as complex as the actual laws of nature would extend into deep evolutionary history and would involve pre-human suffering. |
24 | I thank Jeff Lin, Douglas Stalker, and James Sterba and three anonymous referees for their helpful comments. |
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Jordan, J. Animal Suffering and the Laws of Nature. Religions 2022, 13, 1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111049
Jordan J. Animal Suffering and the Laws of Nature. Religions. 2022; 13(11):1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111049
Chicago/Turabian StyleJordan, Jeffrey. 2022. "Animal Suffering and the Laws of Nature" Religions 13, no. 11: 1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111049
APA StyleJordan, J. (2022). Animal Suffering and the Laws of Nature. Religions, 13(11), 1049. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111049