Pagina's

29 July 2019

Frans de Waal: Mama's Last Hug. Emotions, Sentience, Morality, Meat, Vegetarianism, Veganism.

Frans de Waal (2019) Mama's last hug.
Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us about Ourselves


Mama's last hug is about animal emotions. If animals have emotions, this has consequences Frans de Waal says in his new book Mama's last hug. What are those consequences? 
 

"None of this is to say, however, that we have to keep eating the way we do, or even eat meat at all. Animal protein may be overrated. We live in different times with different possibilities, and we have promising alternatives in the works, such as in vitro and plant-based meats that can be stuffed with all the vitamins we need." (269/357).

 
And that is not all. De Waal puts his views into practice: 

"I admire the effort [of vegetarians] though, and have joined it in my own imperfect and undogmatic fashion by banishing practically all mammalian meat from my family's kitchen." (270/357) [4].

I am pleased, but also surprised. This is the first time he says in print that he has taken the first steps to lower his meat consumption. In 2017 de Waal defended his meat eating on Dutch television [3]. But then he said nothing about reducing his meat consumption. Strangely, in chapter 7 he repeats the same already refuted pro-meat arguments. Why repeating pro-meat fallacies, when you have stopped eating cows and pigs? Here we find ourselves in the middle of a confusing mix of contradictory pro- and anti-meat arguments.


Sentience: What Animals Feel

For example, in chapter 7 'Sentience: What Animals Feel', de Waal presents all the usual pro-meat arguments: we humans have a long evolutionary history of hunting and eating animals, we have an omnivore anatomy (multifunctional dentition, relatively short intestine, massive brain), nutritional value (meat provides the optimal mix of calories, lipids, proteins, vitamins), we owe our cooperative nature, our food-sharing tendencies, our sense of fairness, and even our morality to the subsistence hunting of our ancestors, the natural cycle (every animal plays a role by eating or being eaten), and so on. Again, if these facts are true and the arguments are valid, then why stop eating meat?

This is his explanation: "We live in different times with different possibilities." [7]. Well, that is absolutely true! But different times with different possibilities don't have the power to change our long human evolutionary history, isn't it? And our anatomy and physiology did not change either, nor the nutritional value of meat, et cetera. We are still omnivores, I suppose. But all these facts are routinely used to propagate the 'meat-is-natural' theology. If these views contain any truth, how can they stop being arguments for meat eating? De Waal does not notice the problem. I think that the biological and evolutionary facts did not change, but our ethics. Those carnism arguments never were and never can be arguments for meat eating, simply because one cannot infer values from facts. "I am an omnivore, therefore it is morally acceptable to eat meat" is obviously false. Such a conclusion must follow from a moral principle. Living a vegetarian or vegan lifestyle simply does not contradict the facts of our evolutionary history. They are simply facts, and you need a moral system to change your behaviour.


Frans de Waal explains why he eats meat to Janine Abbring
on Dutch television, August 20th 2017 youtube

I am too much a biologist...

There is another story in the same chapter I have no problem with on its own, but I wonder what practical and moral conclusions we are supposed to draw from it. It starts with the infamous "I am too much a biologist to question the natural circle of life...". What follows is a general biological view about what it means to be a living being. A plant lives from the sun. Plants do not need to kill other living beings. Animals need to kill other living beings to stay alive. Carnivores kill other animals. Herbivores kill plants. Omnivores kill both plants and animals. The principle behind all this is the interest in staying alive of each and every creature on earth. In Darwins words: 'the struggle for existence' [1].
Plants defend themselves with toxic chemicals to repel herbivores. Plants don't like to be eaten. He dedicates a few pages to the plants [2]. In order to stay alive every organism must detect attacks. An organism needs sentience. Sentience is defined as the capacity to experience, feel, or perceive. Plants do react to environmental changes, but that is not the same as experiencing them, according to de Waal. Plants do not have a central nervous system. We must assume plants do not feel pain. Plants 'do not cry out in pain'.

Again, we must ask the question what moral imperative follows from this analysis? Nothing, unless one has endorsed already a moral principle. De Waal writes: 'Humans should respect all forms of life' (270). It is clearly not a statement of fact, it looks like a moral principle. He gives three reasons for this principle:

  1. the inherent dignity of all living things
  2. the interest every form of life has in its own existence and survival
  3. the capacity to suffer
Unfortunately, there are some problems with these statements. First, 'inherent dignity of all living things' is beautiful, but too vague. It cannot distinguish between good and bad actions. It is too broad, because we kill bacteria with antibiotics to save human lives, we destroy malaria mosquitoes and all dangerous parasites to combat disease, and we eat plants. These actions are rather difficult to avoid. So, the first principle fails as a moral guideline.

The second statement is factual and true. It is fundamental to all life. Interpreted as a moral guideline we violate it as soon as we start eating. So, we cannot follow it.

The third statement 'the capacity to suffer' is a descriptive statement, not a moral principle. That is a important difference. Because, one could rightly claim that the experiencing pain is natural. Above that, 'the capacity to suffer' does not apply to all living beings.
These three statements together are –strictly speaking– not moral principles.

But there is no need to invent a moral principle. Jeremy Bentham remarked 140 years ago:
The question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer? Jeremy Bentham, 1879
This position has been elaborated  by philosopher Peter Singer into a moral philosophy. Singer wrote famous books such as Animal Liberation (1975), and The Expanding Circle (1981).

De Waal criticized Singer's animal-rights activist position in his book 'Primates and Philosophers' [8]. De Waal objects to the idea of animal rights. We now know that de Waal consumed meat at the time and reasoned accordingly. Remarkably, Peter Singer is missing in Mama's last hug !

De Waal wrote that it is a moral imperative to reduce meat consumption or even ban it altogether (270/357). That is exactly what vegans like Peter Singer practice. The famous chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall is mentioned in Mama's last hug, but de Waal apparently does not know she is a vegetarian/vegan.

So, if you really want to practice the principle 'do not cause pain to other living beings in so far they are capable of experiencing pain', then it does not make sense to attack vegans [4],[5].

Again, if you really want to commit yourself to this moral principle, then you cannot simultaneously hold:
  1. "it is a moral imperative to reduce meat consumption" (270/357)
  2. "Even if I have no problem with meat-eating per se ..." (269/357).
De Waal does not have a moral problem with meat-eating per se? [6]. Doesn't that contradict his moral imperative?


Conclusion

There is a fundamental tension between the moral principle 'inherent dignity of all living beings'  and the descriptive 'natural circle of life'. De Waal did not resolve this tension. On the contrary. He wants at the same time to legitimize meat consumption with 'the natural circle' philosophy, and legitimize his reduction of meat consumption with a 'inherent dignity' philosophy. 
What we need is a coherent universal moral system that is detached from the 'natural circle of life' and from any personal interests and circumstances. 

As de Waal himself wrote in Primates and Philosophers: "Moral emotions ought to be disconnected from one's immediate situation: they deal with good and bad at a more abstract, disinterested level." [8].

One species has the biggest brain and is the most intelligent animal ever seen on the face of the earth. That species has the highest self-awareness and the most sophisticated language of all animals. That species wrote holy books with the 'Ten Commandments' and produced an ethics culminating in 'the Golden Rule'. That species uses its superior intelligence for inventing bad excuses for killing members of other species. That species is: Homo Sapiens.






Disclosure. I am too much a biologist to question the fact that milk and cheese come from cows, and cows are mammals. I am too much a biologist to question the fact that birds have a central nervous system and that eggs come from birds. I think, we don't have to keep eating the way we do, or even eat animal products at all. I am a vegan. In that sense I am biased. But, I hope without fallacies.


(This blog is an improved version of the previous blog in Dutch.)

Postscript

15 Aug 2019
By the way, are you vegetarian or vergan?

After writing this blog, I discovered the interview of Michael Shermer with Dr. Frans de Waal (12 mrt. 2019) about the book Mama's Last Hug
Check out the last minutes of the interview about meat (57th min), especially the question "By the way, are you vegetarian or vegan?"(58:46). Frans de Waal: "No. I do eat less meat, and I try to avoid eating mammals." Why, why, why is it so hard to stop, if you know for certain they can feel pain???


Postscript


20 Sep 2019
 

I found a review of the book in The New Statesman 27 February 2019 in which the author is disappointed about the conclusions Frans de Waal has drawn from his knowledge about animal emotions:

"It is when the author turns to the implications of all this that his reflections are weakest. His best suggestions include a rather self-serving point that zoos are important repositories for dwindling mammal genes and that supermarkets could carry barcodes on meat products that triggered smartphone images of the living conditions for the dead animals on sale."


Notes

  1. Charles Darwin, Chapter III in the Origin of Species is entitled 'Struggle for Existence'. I wonder whether de Waal is describing the 'dog-eat-dog view of nature' or 'Nature red in tooth and claw'? That is precisely the view of nature he forcefully and indignantly rejects in other contexts! The useful function of predators in natural predator-prey systems is a well established scientific fact. However, the meat industry of our own species does not resemble the natural prey-predator systems in anyway and is in fact unnatural. Pro-meat advocates forget this.
  2. I have the feeling that the lesson of 'the natural circle of life' story among other things seems to be that vegetarians and vegans infringe upon the interests of plants! Vegans are plant-killers! Above that vegans tell fairy tales! That's why Frans de Waal is not a vegan?
  3. Frans de Waal on Dutch television: Frans De Waal uses a fallacy to defend eating meat, 3 Oct. 2017 (fragment)
  4. "...I admire the effort [of vegetarians] though, and have joined it in my own imperfect and undogmatic fashion by banishing practically all mammalian meat". (270/357). Sorry, 'undogmatic'? Vegans are dogmatic? Undogmatic implies be selfish and violate your own moral principle?
  5. Frans de Waal states that the goal will be best accomplished if we honestly face where we come from [our omnivorous past] rather than spinning the fairy tale, often heard these days [where? source please!], that we are meant to be vegan." (270/357). Sorry? How does that help? De Waal criticises those that have gone far beyond his own imperfect attempts to reduce meat intake? You cannot go further than vegans, unless you can live on air alone! [31 July 2019]
  6. Psychologist Naomi Ellemers perfectly describes the behaviour of people like Frans de Waal:
    "Thus, even though being moral implies being honest and reliable, those who are most keen to establish a moral image of themselves tend to be less truthful and reliable in reporting about their own moral behavior" (57/412). Naomi Ellemers (2017) Morality and the Regulation of Social Behavior.
  7. "We live in different times with different possibilities": that is to say, the first prominent modern vegetarian was the Greek philosopher Pythagoras (History of Vegetarianism). Nothing new under the sun! [7 Aug 2019]
  8. Frans de Waal (2006) Primates and Philosophers, p.143 hardback. (quoted by Peter Singer). On page 152 Peter Singer writes: "... make me, I assume, a target of de Waal's criticism of animal rights advocates." De Waal objects to the idea of animal rights for silly reasons. Further, Singer observed that de Waal uses an ad hominem argument against animal rights activists (p.155). That was back in 2006 when de Waal was consuming mammals. [ added 8 Aug 2019 ]

Previous blog

  1. Killing Animals in the Age of Empathy. Frans de Waal, a leading primatologist explains why he eats animals. 26 September 2017.

13 comments:

  1. Gert,

    I can only admire all effort you've put in criticizing FdW's moral principles

    But don't you think that the ('approved Summary for Policymakers (SPM)') report of the IPCC, presented yesterday, August 8, overrules, all the talk about "Emotions, Sentience, Morality, Meat, Vegetarianism, Veganism."?

    I'd say the *facts* are crystal clear now, aren't they?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Harry, thanks for your admiration!
    I heard about the news about food security, and it is not new for me, but I cannot find the exact publication. Do you mean this one:

    https://www.ipcc.ch/2018/10/08/summary-for-policymakers-of-ipcc-special-report-on-global-warming-of-1-5c-approved-by-governments/

    but that is dated October 8, 2018. not August 8 2019.

    I suspect that IPCC does not advice a vegan life style! only reducing meat consumption? But I do not know what exactly they propose.
    Anyway, the reasons behind the report are probably not moral reasons.

    You wrote '...overrules...'. I don't think so. It is important to note that Frans de Waal writes: "Humans should respect all forms of life", which looks a moral principle. Further: prevent pain (in mammals). I am certain that IPCC is not concerned about pain in animals (mammals)!

    The reason I write a Dutch and English blog about Frans de Waal is that I want to warn readers that he is not practising what he preaches, and so he is not a moral example for all of us. On the contrary, he is selfish. All website and newspapers reporting his new book praise the book. Nobody seems to know that he (still) eats meat and is posing as a friend of animals and making money from his books and lectures. And if that is not enough, he attacks vegans (those horrible persons that kill plants!) to show what a altruistic, empathic and reasonable person he is!

    Nobody asks questions or criticises him. Therefore, I do.

    ReplyDelete
  3. gert

    https://www.ipcc.ch/srccl-report-download-page/

    the IPCC doesn't advice reduction of meat consumption. And indeed, the report is not about moral principles etc. It is just about the survival of our species.


    I'd say that should dwarf, trump, or transcend - and overrul- any concern about the moral inconsistencies of a primatologist writing best-sellers

    ReplyDelete
  4. Harry, thanks for the link.
    You wrote "the IPCC doesn't advice reduction of meat consumption", but figure Figure 5.12 'Technical mitigation potential of changing diets' clearly shows that vegan diet is on top of the list, so is the best for the climate.
    The report does not advice anything, as far as I can see, but the data speak for themselves!
    Ultimately, only persons that do maintain moral values, adapt their diet to mitigate climate warming (moral value = climate warming is bad). Persons without any moral values read the report and say: I don't care! Fuck the climate!

    If you are interested in science, knowledge, reason, then you care about correct arguments isn't it? and that implies that you get angry when someone gets away with fallacies.

    We ordinary people need moral role models, persons we can admire and imitate. Frans de Waal could have been the ideal role model right from the start because of the subjects of his writings during his whole career. Do you admire egoists, hypocrites and cheaters?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Nature 8 Aug 2019 wrote: Eat less meat: UN climate-change report calls for change to human diet".
    Harry wrote: "the IPCC doesn't advice reduction of meat consumption"
    Did the UN report really recommend lifestyle change or just reported data on the climate impact of human diets? Or was it formulated in an if-then phrase?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Harry said: "I'd say that should dwarf, trump, or transcend - and overrul- any concern about the moral inconsistencies of a primatologist writing best-sellers."

    No. Millions and millions of people like Frans de Waal keep the cruel and environmental- and climate unfriendly meat industry alive!
    Millions and millions of people like Frans de Waal keep the carnism ideology alive!

    see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnism

    Carnism is a prevailing ideology in which people support the use and consumption of animal products, especially meat as "natural", "normal", "necessary".

    An ideology needs fallacies and fairy tales!
    If people would stop using fallacies and fairy tales, it would be better for animals and the climate.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Gert,

    Pan Survival in the 21st Century: Chimpanzee Cultural Preservation, Rehabilitation, and Emancipation Manifesto HUMAN EVOLUTION Vol. 34 - n. 1-2 (1-19) – 2019 DOI: 10.14673/HE201912047

    "A recent study of I.R. and colleagues exemplifies Pan’s similarity to Homo regarding meaningful informational-exchange (Roffman et al., 2015a). Particularly,
    Pan’s competency for giving testimony (figurative and abstract) and having structural bilateral communication with syntax via pantomiming fulfill the criteria for habeas corpus (Hall & Waters, 2000)."

    Pan rights, Okay. But what about Pan crimes?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Harry, thanks for pointing out the article. Considering the fact that Frans de Waals' livelong chimp studies, and the manifesto is defending the rights of chimps & bonobos, it is mildly surprising that he is not one of the authors of the Manifest...

    http://www.pontecorboli.com/digital/OpenAccess/Roffman_Pan.pdf
    (4 authors are from Israel).

    Even more surprising: de Waal is not in the References as main author, he only appears in one publication which has Richard Wrangham as first author. de Waal was never at the forefront of animal rights movement.

    Harry wrote "Pan rights, Okay. But what about Pan crimes? ".

    Read this: "Chimp Haven was founded in 1995 in order to respond to the need for long term chimpanzee care. The need for care extended to those chimpanzees no longer used in biomedical research, the entertainment industry or the pet trade."
    https://chimphaven.org/about-us/history/
    The US National Institutes of Health 'owned'(!) 300 chimps intended for hepatitis and HIV studies. How many chimps have been 'used' in medical experients? Is that what you mean by Pan crimes? Did chimps use humans for hepatitis and HIV studies?

    ReplyDelete
  9. Gert,

    all my pleasure

    okay, about Pancrimes. There's symmetry in law: Rights imply obligations, and vv. (apart from a some exceptions, like with minors) So wat obligation(s) would - adult- chimps have?

    No symmetry here. So no law!

    Also, in science, e.g. medical experiments, symmetry is completely absent.

    E.g try reversing the title of Frans' penultimate book: Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are?

    Animals are smart, cunning, intelligent, indeed, pick any epithet - but reversing Frans' question just does make no sense - or does it?...

    Of course a "licence to kill" is a non sequitur here.

    Only animals are 'allowed' to kill- it's their instinct.

    Morality/law sets our species apart: no matter how deeply rooted in evolution as Frans' own 'verneer theory' holds. That is, we are talking about a difference in 'kind' here, not in 'degree'. (to use Darwin's words).

    And science? Same thing. (another kind of law!)

    ReplyDelete
  10. Harry said: "all my pleasure". Sorry! I reported crimes humans do to their closest relatives, and all the millions of lab animals and you answer: "all my pleasure"? That is completely incomprehensible to me.

    Are Animals Smart Enough to Know How Smart Humans Are?
    Slightly different variant:
    "U schreef: ‘Soms zien de chimpansees beter in wat voor bui ik ben dan ikzelf.’ ‘Ja. Zo gevoelig zijn ze. Dat je zonder het te weten in een geirriteerde bui bent en de apen daarop geïrriteerd reageren.’" wrote Frans de Waal in an interview in de Volkskrant.
    https://www.volkskrant.nl/nieuws-achtergrond/frans-de-waal~bf72351d/
    So, indeed animals understand people better than humans do themselves, sometimes.

    Harry wrote: "There's symmetry in law: Rights imply obligations, and vv. (apart from a some exceptions, like with minors) So wat obligation(s) would - adult- chimps have? "

    There is no symmetry in law. You mention only one 'exception': babies, children. But do mentally retarded children and adults have no legal rights because they can not fulfil their obligations?
    What about retired people? Physically handicapped people, the blind, the deaf, the unemployed, the homeless, refugees, people in a wheelchair due to a car accident, people addicted to alcohol/drugs, people with genetic diseases, and different category: pets (dogs and cats: do they have obligations?). In short: our (Western) society is based on human rights as a non-conditional fundamental right that does not depend on whether or not they can fulfil obligations. What a cruel and primitive society that would be!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Gert

    1.“(all) my pleasure”.
    Google, and you'll get: "used as a polite reply to thanks. e.g. "‘Oh, thank you!’ ‘My pleasure.’"

    2. 'slightly different variant'?

    I wrote "animals are smart, cunning, intelligent, pick ANY epithet”
    Ok, YOU pickED empathy. but does understanding irritation of one person, by one chimp, amount to science?!

    Do dogs do science? (better than cats, f.e., because they understand us- even our words- better than cats do)?

    You wrote “animals understand people better than humans do themselves, sometimes". Indeed, right: Sometimes.

    So, self-understanding amounts to science, you'd say? Science is a kind of introspection, or the other way around, introspection is kinda science?

    I'd say that at least in science you'll need to measure a few things- even Frans admitted that (see above). So you can't reverse 1st and 3rd person perspectives here (a key idea of the western tradition of (experimental) science since Bacon and Galilei, and basically an important issue of Frans' book, e.g. his distinction between emotions and feelings)

    3. exceptions
    (including the typo 'a' (excuses)): "some exceptions" I wrote, so plural, and indeed, I gave only one example.

    But I know of other ones. So mentioning a few more only substantiates my point. This is implied by your own conclusion "whether or not they can fulfil (sic) obligations" .

    Indeed, we make exceptions to the rule of symmetry of rights and obligations, because we don't want 'a cruel society'. Both You and I, and any other citizen, have rights and, indeed, obligations as long as we are able to fulfill them. That is, as long as we can be held responsible. Kids aren't before the age of 15, or so.

    The point was not about listing examples, but about the fact that this practice of law, this morality, sets us apart.

    apart from the fact that animals can be really nice, and or 'helpful' even to non- conspecifics)

    but accusing them of (gross) neglicence would be silly). Also, responsibility (obligations) the other way around, simply doesn't make sense : think of these silly medieval trials.

    4. same asymmetry with science.

    5. In short, quoting FdW – even quite at length- is not an argument. Adding a few more exceptions to the one I mentioned, also isn’t

    The bottom line is: There is no equivalent of argument in biology. Refutation of that argument would be the ultimate argument. So looking forward!

    (Btw a proper Dutch translation of 'argue is 'bekvechten". So, I am aware of the fact that there's no asymmetry here in our language :-) )

    ReplyDelete
  12. Harry, thanks for your comments!

    1. "Do dogs do science? " No, so we can eat them.
    Similar: no plant or animal does science in the way we do, so pure logic dictates that we can do whatever we like with them.

    3. "exceptions"
    I disagree with the term "exceptions", but OK if I accept the term for the sake of argument, then there must be a reason for those exceptions. Please spell it out. It is most important.

    "Both You and I, and any other citizen, have rights and, indeed, obligations as long as we are able to fulfill them."
    I earlier wrote: fundamental human rights are unconditional as far as I know. Have a look at the Universal Declaration of Human Rights at wikipedia. If there exist obligations at all they are for governments to maintain those human rights in their own country. I did not see obligations for individuals. Is there a Universal Declaration for Human Obligations?

    3. "The point was not about listing examples, but about the fact that this practice of law, this morality, sets us apart. "

    Sets us apart: see Genesis. Yes, we do not hold animals morally responsible for their actions. In that sense we are different from all other animals. So, what follows from that? That is the question you need to answer.
    My response: WE humans can be and must be held responsible for all our actions towards animals. That sets us apart.

    Finally, a thought: animals have no obligations? Billions of animals involuntarily give their lives for our pleasure. Living and sentient beings are magically transformed in to meat and they are no individuals any more.
    Humans have 'the right to life', that implies food. But does the universal declaration state that humans have the right to eat meat?
    There is a proposal: "The Right to Refuse to Kill".

    ReplyDelete
  13. Gert

    1. "Of course a "licence to kill" is a non sequitur here", I wrote. Yet, dogs do not practice science, as well as monkeys.

    3. a reason for those exceptions is easy to spell out: "because we don't want 'a cruel society' "(your own words).

    Human rights are "unconditional" ? There is this principle of legality, meaning that you can’t claim (legal) rights that are not described in the law (cfr (the even more crucial) nulla-poena principle).

    Take article one of our constitution. So its it’s a legal offence to discriminate (even serious negligence can be a legal offence here. (responsibility, liability, accountability).

    See also article 29 Universal declaration of Human rights, which indeed isn't a penal law, a criminal code.

    Our legal (and moral) responsibility is just one of the differences that set us apart. Science is another one.

    What follows from that?, you asked. A lot, too much to mention. But for one thing: biology won't give us the answer. Frans would agree, as far as I know.

    Your response? Indeed, there is no symmetry here. Animal vs human trials are silly,- medieval, indeed. But human vs animal trials aren't (Wet van 19 mei 2011, (Wet dieren)) Animal law for humans, that is, because animals can't read (joking)

    The universal declaration is about HUMAN rights. We are the only animal with such a declaration. We also are the only animal with a Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare, UDAW, by the way.

    Your proposal: "The Right to Refuse to Kill". You already do have that right!
    (also no symmetry here- ask any lion, or….)

    There is a lot more that sets us apart from other animals when you come to think of it.

    Yet Darwinist find this hard to do ;-)

    Finally: this ‘magic transformation in to meat’, is just plain stupid, silly, a terrible waste. Eventually people will understand that. Minds are already changing…

    ReplyDelete

Comments to posts >30 days old are being moderated.
Safari causes problems, please use Firefox or Chrome for adding comments.