Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.

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Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.
Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities Question Read the case on domestic maids in the local news (don’t count as a reference in your submission) Case 2. Prominent businessman and wife claim trial to exploiting domestic workers (Source: https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2019/04/12/prominent-businessman-and-wife-claim-trial-to-exploiting-domestic-workers/) Write a 2,000-word reflection entitled “Domestic maids in Malaysia are working in sweatshops conditions”. The theme of sweatshops work conditions must be an integrated part of your reflection. Attention: (Do not focus on gender discriminations or sexual harassment) – The title is about sweatshops conditions (1 paragraph = capture 1 main thought) Requirements: 2000 words APA 7 Refrencing Style 13 Citations from research within EBSCOhost database inside the Sunway Campus Library. How to Log In? https://sclibrary.sunway.edu.my/home User ID: 17042870, PIN: 1234 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4Y-5UGjw7I This video will guide you to use EBSCOhost database in the library. Format: Title: Domestic maids in Malaysia are working in sweatshops conditions Description of Case (340 words) Definition of sweatshops working conditions Description of the case in the context of sweatshops work conditions Personal Thoughts and Reflections (340 words) Write about your direct experience with a domestic maid Evaluation of the Case (340 words) Making a moral judgement “It is ethical or it is unethical to treat domestic maid in this manner” (Pick a side ) 2 normative theories to support your view Talk about reasons why one side is weak and another is strong. (Talk about the strength of the normative theory for the side you picked. In contrast, talk about the weakness of the normative theory for the unpicked side) For example (Normative Theory) Libertarianism Utilitarianism Ethical Egoism Ethical Parochialism Kantianism Prima Facie Duty Virtue Ethics Ethical Relativism Rawlsian Theory Of Justice Recommendations Government policies (340 words) Current the policies does not address … I would recommend that … (Malaysia only) Maid Agencies (340 words) Employers (340 words) References
Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.
Individual Assignment (35%) Name: ____________________ ID: _______________________ Title: “Domestic maids in Malaysia are working in sweatshops conditions” 1. Description of Case (JUST AN EXAMPLE WHAT “DESCRIPTIVE” MEANS, 340 words) There are X number of foreign maids in Malaysia (cite EBSCOhost source). These maids are from various countries, namely …. (cite). Usually the maids can only enter the country through intermediaries (agencies) (cite). The rules and regulations in Malaysia regarding foreign maids are provide by the immigration department of Malaysia …. (cite). The working conditions of the domestic maids can be catergorised as sweatshops working conditions … (cite). Sweatshops working conditions are defined as …. (cite). Case 1 (Maid A, Maid B) in this assignment does not have similar features to sweatshops working conditions. For examples …. Other cases also exhibit similar features …. (cite). For example, ……. (cite). [1 paragraph = capture 1 main thought] 2. Personal Reflections and Feelings Write about your direct experience with a domestic maid. Write about your relatives’ experience with a domestic maid. Reflect on Case 1 or any other cases (cite). Imagine you are the maid. When do you use citation? When you use information from outside/any sources. “Exacting wording” (Toh, 2021, p. 23). Citing verbatim. 3. Evaluation (Moral Judgement)  FINAL EXAM Ethical Moral Issue Unethical The working conditions of domestic maids in Malaysia is general ethical, they are not in sweatshops conditions. – Libertarianism – Utilitarianism – Ethical parochialism Domestic Maids in Malaysia are Working in Sweatshops Conditions The working conditions of domestic maids in Malaysia is generally unethical as they can be categorized as sweatshops conditions. – Kantianism – 2nd formulation (Arnold and Bowie, 2003) – Prima Facie Duty – duty of nonmaleficence, duty of beneficence – Virtue ethics – justice, fairness, liberty Pick a side (X) (Present the opposing side) There are arguments that say the working conditions of domestic maids in Malaysia is “Y”. The arguments in favour of Y can be support by 1 or 2 normative theories (choose the strongest theories). Based on Theory 1, it is argued that …. (cite). Base on Theory 2, it is argued that …. (cite). (Reasons why you reject the Opposing Side) However, I find the arguments for Y is weak because of 2 or 3 reasons. The reasons are: …. …. … (What is my moral judgement) My moral judgement on this issue is that, the working conditions of domestic maids in Malaysia is “X”. The arguments in favour of X can e support by 2 normative theories. (Justification by 2 or 3 “strong” Normative Theories) …. …. For these reasons, I think it morally “X” for domestic maids to work in these conditions. (every normative claim must be explicitly justified by normative theories) 4. Recommendations Government Policies – Current the policies does not address … I would recommend that … Maid Agencies Employers Word Count: References … … …
Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.
Changes to be made Please divide the word count appropriately change: roughly 340 words for each part (Because marks will be given accordingly) For description of the case change: You should be emphasizing more about the case – I don’t see that you are talking about the case Evaluation of the case Since you have chosen unethical Change: Libertarianism and Utilitarianism are not suitable they are more on the ethical side Libertarianism – this argues that employer agree paying this amount and the maid agrees to work for it, she has the freewill after the contract ends (Which is ethical) Utilitarianism – they decided that they come here with their own benefits (support their home, they can go home after the contract) – cost and benefit analysis Unethical You should be using Kantian Ethics (Kantianism) and Prima Facie Duty Kantianism – use humanity principle (u must treat people equally with respect) Treating maid with abuse is unethical. Prima Facie Duty (Duty of nonmaleficence) – We have a stronger duty not to violate people’s rights and not to injure them than to assist people or promote their well-being After using 2 normative theory to support your moral judgement (You don’t need to talk about the weakness about the 2 normative theory). Instead argue why ethical is weak in this case. Talk about the weakness for ethical – such as the limitations of ethical (Normative theory: – Limitations of Libertarianism and Utilitarianism) Please include appropriate citations for each theory. I randomly searched and found inside EBSCOhost with appropriate keywords (e.g. domestic maids, domestic workers, foreign maids, sweatshops conditions, “specific normative theory” etc). I found these 4 (You may use) Maid abuse – O.P. Murty MBBS MD (Professor Forensic Pathology) Policies and Laws Regulating Migrant Workers in Malaysia: A Critical Appraisal Intimate encounters: the ambiguities of belonging in the transnational migration of Indonesian domestic workers to Malaysia The work-life experiences of an invisible workforce The case of live-in women migrant domestic workers in Malaysia You may use the keywords to find appropriate journals for this paper. Others overall is good just need to adjust the word count as stated.
Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 0360-5310/99/2401-0043$15.00 1999, Vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 43Ð66 © Swets & Zeitlinger The Appearance of KantÕs Deontology in Contemporary Kantianism: Concepts of Patient Autonomy in Bioethics Barbara Secker University of Toronto ABSTRACT KantÕs concept of autonomy and the Kantian notion of autonomy are often conflated in bioethics. However, the contemporary Kantian notion has very little at all to do with KantÕs original. In order to further bioethics discourse on autonomy, I critically distin- guish the contemporary Kantian notion from KantÕs original concept of moral autonomy. I then evaluate the practical relevance of both concepts of autonomy for use in bioethics. I argue that it is not appropriate to appeal to either concept toward assessing which patients we ought to respect as autonomous. Finally, I sketch criteria for what I take to be a more promising concept of autonomy for patients. Key words: autonomy, decision-making, Kant, Kantianism, moral autonomy. I. INTRODUCTION In opposition to the traditional paternalism of the physician-patient rela- tionship, the last few decades have seen patient autonomy emerge as a pivotal concept in human research and health contexts. The doctrine of informed decision-making, the concept of mental competence, and the principles of privacy, veracity, and confidentiality, all reflect the relative- ly recent move to assess, protect and enhance the ability of patients to make autonomous decisions about their health care, by limiting the power of physicians to act in paternalistic ways and by making them more ac- countable to patients. Respect for autonomy has become a fundamental Ñ arguably the paramount Ñ moral principle in bioethics, together with principles of beneficence and justice. Since patients have both a prima facie right to autonomy and a need for care, and since physicians have a duty both to respect the autonomy of, and to provide care for, their pa- Correspondence: Barbara Secker, Ph.D., University of Toronto, Department of Philoso- phy, and Joint Centre for Bioethics; and Rehabilitation Institute of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. BARBARA SECKER 44 tients, much bioethical discussion revolves around questions of decisional authority, cast as conflict between the principles of autonomy and benefi- cence. Proponents of the principle of respect for autonomy need an adequate model of autonomy Ñ a foundation for the right of autonomous patients to make their own health care decisions. Respecting patientsÕ autonomy pre- supposes the presence of autonomy in sufficient degree; however, not all patients are sufficiently autonomous. Thus, we need appropriate criteria in order to help us distinguish those patients who can make decisions auton- omously from those who cannot and whose welfare depends on others deciding in those patientsÕ best interests. Despite the moral premium placed on autonomy, it is common to find the term used rather intuitively. The concept of autonomy is rarely given much analysis and thus frequently operates in bioethics as a vague, ambig- uous or elusive concept. While several different accounts of autonomy can be identified in the literature, 1 one of the more influential concepts is labelled ÒKantian.Ó 2 This Kantian concept of autonomy and the principle of respect for autonomy find their inspiration in KantÕs deontology, which is one of the major theoretical frameworks underlying bioethical argumen- tation. Many bioethicists appear to believe that the Kantian notion of autono- my and KantÕs concept of autonomy are one and the same. 3 However, the contemporary Kantian notion has very little at all to do with KantÕs origi- nal. In order to consider the adequacy of each of the contemporary Kantian concept and KantÕs original model for bioethics Ñ and to further bioethics discourse on autonomy Ñ the task of critically distinguishing these often conflated concepts must be undertaken. Toward these ends, I describe KantÕs model of moral autonomy and the contemporary Kantian conception of autonomy as it is portrayed in bioeth- ics. I then show that these concepts have little in common. Next, I evaluate the practical relevance of the Kantian notion and of KantÕs original con- cept for use in bioethics. I argue that due to moral and practical problems, it is not appropriate to appeal to either concept toward assessing which patients we ought to respect as autonomous. Finally, I sketch criteria for what I take to be a more promising concept of patient autonomy. (Through- out this paper, I refer to KantÕs original concept of moral autonomy as ÒKantÕsÓ concept of autonomy and to contemporary bioethicsÕ concept of autonomy, inspired by Kant, as the ÒKantianÓ concept of autonomy.) KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 45 II. KANTÕS CONCEPT OF MORAL AUTONOMY 4 KantÕs moral philosophy is built on his resolution of the fundamental problem of human freedom and causal determinism. 5 Laws of freedom and laws of nature are compatible, according to Kant, as long as free will Ñ the ability to act autonomously Ñ is understood to belong to the nou- menal, rather than to the phenomenal, realm. Causality and knowledge are limited to the natural world; and freedom and morality apply to the intelli- gible world. Granted, we cannot know with certainty that freedom exists, but we must necessarily take the idea of free will as a practical and norma- tive postulate if we are to preserve the conception of ourselves as moral agents. Thus, morality presupposes autonomy of the will which, in turn, presupposes freedom. In KantÕs words: The concept of autonomy is inseparably connected with the idea of freedom and with the former there is inseparably bound the universal principle of morality, which ideally is the ground of all actions of ra- tional beings, just as natural law is the ground of all appearances (FMM, p. 71). 6 Clearly, then, autonomy of the will is the central concept in KantÕs moral philosophy. Kant describes autonomy of the will as Òthat property of [the rational will] by which it is a law to itself independently of any property of objects of volitionÓ (FMM, p. 59). A being with an autonomous will, then, is one who is self-legislating, rather than subject to pre- or other-given laws. The self-given laws of an autonomous agent are not just any laws, however; these laws are given by the agentÕs pure practical reason, and the form those laws take, according to Kant, is that of the one and only Categorical Imperative Ñ ÒAct only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal lawÓ (FMM, p. 39). In KantÕs words: Ò[man] is subject to his own, yet universal legislation, andÉhe is only bound to act in accordance with his own will, which is, however, designed by nature to be a will giving universal lawsÓ (FMM, p. 49). The Categorical Imperative is the supreme principle of morality Ñ the supreme principle of practical reason Ñ and autonomy, on KantÕs view, is inextricably linked to conformity with this principle. By contrast, heter- onomy results when the Òwill does not give itself the [universal] law,Ó but, rather, Ògoes outside itselfÓ and chooses to act in accordance with the laws of nature or of God Ñ in other words, when it chooses hypothetical imper- BARBARA SECKER 46 atives (FMM, pp. 59Ð60). Furthermore, in contrast to heteronomy or au- tonomy of the wills of finite rational beings, the maxims of a holy will (or an absolutely good will) are necessarily in ÒharmonyÓ with the laws of autonomy (FMM, p. 58). In order to understand better the connections among autonomy of the will, rationality, freedom, and morality, it is necessary to outline briefly some of the moves made by Kant in section three of his Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals. First, toward explaining the autonomy of the will, Kant undertakes an analysis of the concept of freedom. He begins with a definition of negative freedom: ÒAs will is a kind of causality of living beings so far as they are rational, freedom would be that property of this causality by which it can be effective independently of foreign causes determining itÓ (FMM, p. 64, my emphasis). Human wills, then, are neces- sarily free in this negative sense Ñ that is, there is no natural necessity of outcome when a rational agent deliberates and chooses to act. Second, Kant fills out the concept of positive freedom, which goes beyond independence of ÒforeignÓ causes. Since negative freedom alone cannot account for the causality of the will (it only describes what does not determine the will), its causality must be non-alien. Thus, if free will occurs it must be not only negatively, but also positively, free. Its causality must be a capacity for autonomy: ÒWhat else, then, can freedom of the will be but autonomy, i.e., the property of the will to be a law to itself?Ó (FMM, p. 65). So, autonomy presupposes positive freedom. Third, assuming familiarity with his arguments in section two Ñ where he argues that the supreme principle of practical reason ties autonomy to the capacity to choose universalizable maxims Ñ Kant quickly derives the Categorical Imperative from autonomy. He encapsulates his claims thus far: Òif freedom of the will is presupposed, morality together with its principle follows from it by mere analysis of its conceptÓ (FMM, p. 65). 7 KantÕs next move is to presuppose, since he cannot prove, that freedom must belong to all rational agents, and that Òevery being which cannot act otherwise than under the idea of freedom is thereby really free in a practi- cal respectÓ (FMM, p. 66). Rational beings must regard themselves as free in so far as they, via their practical reason, can attempt to move themselves to action. To this point, then, Kant can make a conditional conclusion along these lines: If we have a rational will, or practical reason, then we are free in a positive sense, and capable of autonomy, and, thus, bound by morality. Finally, toward the middle of the third section, Kant invokes his distinc- tion between the noumenal and phenomenal realms in order to resolve the problem of freedom and determinism, and to explain how the law of hu- KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 47 man reason contains the Categorical Imperative. KantÕs view, then, is that all finite rational beings have the capacity for moral autonomyÑfor self, yet universal, legislation. Yet, only those agents who choose to act on the moral law from duty act autonomously and, thus, virtuously. That is, moral autonomy requires a good will Ñ that one acts for the sake of duty and not for any other reason (e.g., self-interest or natural inclination). Those who (choose to) act on some other maxim act heteronomously. 8 III. THE KANTIAN CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY One of the less sketchy descriptions of the Kantian concept of autonomy, as it operates in bioethics, is given by Mappes and DeGrazia (1996) in their introduction to the popular textbook Biomedical Ethics. 9 Following a brief paragraph in which the authors locate the basis of the moral value accorded to individual autonomy in KantÕs view of respect for persons, they ask Ò[b]ut how does Kant understand autonomy?Ó Their response, in its entirety, is: KantÕs primary focus is on the autonomy of the will. For Kant, ÒAuton- omy of the will is the property the will has of being a law to itself.Ó What Kant calls the Òdignity of man as a rational creatureÓ is due to human beings possessing just that property that enables them to govern their own actions in accordance with rules of their own choosing. Putting aside many complexities in KantÕs own thinking, a Kantian position central in biomedical ethics describes autonomy in terms of self-con- trol, self-direction, or self-governance. The individual capable of act- ing on the basis of effective deliberation, guided by reason, and neither driven by emotions or compulsions nor manipulated or coerced by oth- ers is, on the Kantian position, the model of autonomy (Mappes and DeGrazia, 1996, p. 28, my emphasis). On this account (and other similar accounts 10) of the Kantian position, then, an autonomous person is a free, independent, self-governing individ- ual. Moreover, an autonomous person decides and acts based on exclu- sively rational reasons Ñ that is, her choices and actions are influenced by reason, not by emotion or inclination. In addition, she is free from physical or psychological constraints, imposed by herself or by others, to choose and act. In sum, a subject who meets the requirements of this Kantian concept of autonomy is self-determining in the sense that she enjoys per- sonal liberty in deciding and acting based on her reason alone. BARBARA SECKER 48 IV. DISTINGUISHING KANTÕS CONCEPT FROM THE KANTIAN CONCEPT The contemporary Kantian view of autonomy in bioethics has little in com- mon with KantÕs original model. In the most general sense, both accounts share the core idea of autonomy as self-governance (of some kind). But KantÕs understanding of this core notion is not self-determination, self-con- trol, self-direction (or any of the other synonyms Kantians use for autono- my). KantÕs ÒautonomyÓ means, literally, rational Òself-legislation,Ó and is necessarily connected with morality. Mappes and DeGrazia describe Kan- tian subjects as governing Òtheir own actions in accordance with rules of their own choosingÓ (Mappes and DeGrazia, 1996, p. 28), 11 whereas, Kant specifies that the self-chosen laws of rational, autonomous persons are uni- versal moral laws. KantÕs conception is not of individual or personal auton- omy, where the central question is ÒWhat do I really want, and is it best for me?Ó; rather, it is of moral autonomy which applies universally, and asks the question ÒIs this what I ought to do?Ó, morally speaking. Both concepts of autonomy place a premium on rationality. But, as we have seen, for Kant rationality implies something much different than the rational pursuit of desires or preferences with foresight and critical reflec- tion. For Kant, rationality requires logical and volitional consistency such that one could will that the maxims of oneÕs actions become universal laws. Thus, KantÕs understanding of rationality differs significantly from the Kantian view of rationality as merely instrumental and internally co- herent (OÕNeill, 1989, p. 66). Given that the independence suggested by the Kantian concept may be interpreted as requiring self-sufficiency, 12 we can further distinguish these two concepts of autonomy by noting that Kant is not committed to such a position. As Onora OÕNeill explains: Kant speaks of beings such as ourselves as finite rational beings not only because their rationality is limited, but because they are finite in many ways. They have limited capacities to act that can be destroyed or undercut in many ways. Self-sufficiency is an incoherent goal for finite rational beings; at most they can coherently aim to minimize their de- pendence on others (OÕNeill, 1989, p. 133, my emphasis). 13 Nothing follows from KantÕs conception of autonomy to the effect that autonomous agents must be independent of or separate from others. What OÕNeill says of Kantian ethicists in general seems to apply to Kantian bioethicists. She writes: ÒMany of them offer no account of the KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 49 virtues, or even deny that an account is possible; many treat rights rather than obligations as fundamental; nearly all rely on a preference-based theory of action and an instrumental account of rationality, all of which are incompatible with KantÕs ethicsÓ (OÕNeill, 1991, p. 184). Clearly, Kant and contemporary Kantian bioethicists have very different ideas about agency, rationality, and autonomy. 14 V. ON THE PRACTICAL RELEVANCE OF THE KANTIAN CONCEPT FOR BIOETHICS The moral requirement to respect Kantian autonomy in health contexts has the potential to balance the traditional paternalism and power relations in health practitioner-patient relationships. The Kantian ideal endeavors to promote and protect patientsÕ autonomous decision-making Ñ to entrench competent patientsÕ rights to ultimate decisional authority. However, in addition to inevitable problems associated with attempts to apply this kind of under-developed account, 15 there are a number of diffi- culties with appealing to this picture of Kantian autonomy in making judgments about patientsÕ capacities for autonomous decision-making. These difficulties, which appear to stem from unanalyzed assumptions about human capacities, make this concept unfit for practical use in bioeth- ics. My main criticisms of Kantian autonomy concern: (1) its impractical- ity given the nature of patients and health contexts; (2) its normative assumptions about human nature; and (3) its potential for abuse. First, given the nature of patienthood, the Kantian concept of autonomy demands too much of patients. This idealistic concept is of little practical relevance in health contexts where patients, on the whole, bear little re- semblance to the Kantian free, independent, exclusively rational individu- al. There are a variety of constraints common in health settings which may undermine Kantian autonomy. For example, some patients may lack or have reduced cognitive and volitional capacities which, on the Kantian view, render them imperfectly autonomous or nonautonomous (OÕNeill, 1984, p. 176). Other common internal constraints include pain, anxiety, fear, depression, effects of treatment, lack of information, inadequate un- derstanding, and false beliefs. In addition, patients generally are subject to a variety of external controlling influences. Common external constraints include pressure from relatively powerful health care professionals, and from friends and family members. Institutional environments themselves are often disorienting and restrictive, controlling patients in various ways via architecture, equipment, procedures and routines. Any one or more of BARBARA SECKER 50 such constraints may impede capacity for reasoned deliberation and choice and, therefore, Kantian autonomy. Moreover, the highly rationalistic, individualistic Kantian account ap- pears to assume that all that patients need to qualify as autonomous, in addition to the requisite intrinsic capacities (no small feat), is negative freedom. However, patients frequently are in vulnerable positions, are unable to act on their decisions, and require that positive measures be taken on their behalf. For example, mere non-interference is insufficient for a patient who requires a professionalÕs assistance to realize her auton- omously-made choice of active euthanasia. If we appeal to the Kantian view (based on an ideal of the self as inde- pendent and exclusively rational), very few, if any, patients will be regarded as autonomous. Actual patients are likely to be dependent or interdepend- ent, and their decision-making is not always based (exclusively) on reason. My second concern is that Kantian autonomy appears to place a moral premium on independence. The corresponding normative assumptions about the nature of human capacities and interaction may contribute to the devaluing of those patients who may be dependent and vulnerable. As Alastair Campbell explains, if autonomy is morally valuable, and if auton- omy is equated with independence, then dependence is regarded as moral- ly inadequate and, consequently, those who are dependent are devalued (Campbell, 1991). In CampbellÕs words, the result is that: the chronically dependent become a special problem, an embarrassment to the dominant moral value. Fragility and vulnerability, rather than being seen as appropriate parts of life from the cradle to the grave, become obstacles to be overcome by the self-sufficient man or woman. The ÒsuccessfulÓ patient is always the one who transcends the state of patienthood (Campbell, 1991, p. 106). The nature of patienthood, however, is partially characterized by depend- ency of one kind or another; thus, the over-valuing of autonomy as inde- pendence devalues patients who require and accept help, those who are unable to ÒtranscendÓ their patienthood. This individualistic attitude also may threaten the welfare of persons who require help but do not seek it or accept it when it is offered for fear of the stigma attached to being Ònonau- tonomous.Ó George Agich observes that this view of autonomy as inde- pendence has engendered certain ÒdefencesÓ against dependency Ñ Óa denial of need, hostility toward helpers even in the face of disabilities that require assistance from others, contempt for the real or imagined weak- ness of others,Ó and so on (Agich, 1990, pp. 12Ð13). KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 51 My third criticism of the Kantian concept is that it may promote pater- nalism better than it promotes patient autonomy. 16 Because the Kantian concept is not well suited for application to patients and yet still is one of the dominant accounts, I am concerned that patients may be measured against its rigorous standards, that the majority will not Òmeasure up,Ó and that some health care professionals and institutions may attempt to justify wholesale paternalism. Not long ago, patient autonomy was an idea foreign to health care, and physicians traditionally have held (and many still hold) that patients do not have the capacity to participate meaningfully in decision-making; thus, adopting a model of autonomy that patients have little hope of approxi- mating may play into the hands of opponents of patient autonomy. Patients who are not perceived as autonomous may not be given a choice or even be consulted about their health care options: [The principle of respect for autonomy] does not apply to persons who are not in a position to act in a sufficiently autonomous manner Ñ perhaps because they are immature, incapacitated, ignorant, coerced, or in a position in which they can be exploited by othersÉ The behavior of nonautonomous persons may be validly controlled on grounds of benef- icence in order to protect them from harms that might result from their behavior (Beauchamp and Childress, 1989, p. 73). This all-or-nothing conception of autonomy which the Kantian model ap- pears to embrace has the potential to deny many, if not most, patients at least some control over their health care, even when they have considera- ble capacity for agency. In sum, the Kantian concept of autonomy does not provide adequate practical guidance for determining the kind and degree of autonomy present in patients. 17 A more applicable account of autonomy is needed for health care contexts, one which accommodates the realities of patientsÕ situa- tions; respects dependence, interdependence, and independence; and does not justify wholesale paternalism. Toward discovering a better way of understanding autonomy in health contexts, I now turn to KantÕs model of moral autonomy to assess its potential value for bioethics. BARBARA SECKER 52 VI. ON THE PRACTICAL RELEVANCE OF KANTÕS CONCEPT FOR BIOETHICS KantÕs notion of respect for the autonomy of persons has become a funda- mental principle in bioethics, albeit used to respect quite a different kind of autonomy than Kant intended. In this section, I argue that KantÕs con- cept of moral autonomy is not a concept we should attempt to Òplug intoÓ bioethicsÕ principle of respect for autonomy because of its undesirability as an ideal and its impracticability in assessment contexts. Due to the extended emphasis on rationality Ñ to the exclusion of adequate consideration of desires and inclinations Ñ KantÕs model of autonomy is an inappropriate ideal for bioethics. (This criticism is some- what similar to my first objection to the contemporary Kantian concept of autonomy.) As Jay Katz points out, KantÕs model is built on a theoretical view of the nature of rational beings which neglects complex interrela- tions among reason, emotion and the external world (Katz, 1984, p. 110). This inattention does not mean that Kant does not acknowledge that finite rational beings have desires and inclinations Ñ rather, it is that he judges that consideration of Òempirical psychologyÓ is not part of his task at hand. Kant writes: ÒNor need we ask on what the feeling of pleasure or displeasure rests, how desires and inclinations arise, and how, finally, maxims arise from desires and inclination under the co-operation of rea- sonÓ (FMM, p. 45). Contrary to popular belief, Kant does not hold that a morally worthy action performed from duty is necessarily opposed to the inclinations. He does, however, think that inclinations are Òso lacking in absolute worth that the universal wish of every rational being must be indeed to free himself completely from themÓ (FMM, p. 45). As the preceding paragraph shows, Kant does not deny that maxims can be founded on inclinations; his point is that inclinations cannot be the condition of maxims if they are to be morally virtuous. Illustrative of this is the following passage from the Critique of Practical Reason: Now it is certainly undeniable that every volition must have an object and therefore a material; but the material cannot be supposed, for this reason, to be the determining ground or condition of the maximÉ Thus the happiness of others may be the object of the will of a rational being, but if it were the determining ground of the maxim, not only would one have to presuppose that we find in the welfare of others a natural satisfaction but also one would have to find a want such as that which is occasioned in some men by a sympathetic disposition (CPrR, pp. 34Ð35). KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 53 The Categorical Imperative Ñ the supreme principle of pure practical reason Ñ must be made the condition of the autonomous agentÕs maxims, and the capacity to make it so lies within the agentÕs power. In terms of the autonomy of patients, appealing to KantÕs concept would mean that autonomous patients must act in accord with the moral law for the sake of duty. While moral autonomy is not incompatible with inclina- tions, the autonomous decision-making process is first and foremost one of pure practical reason; according to Kant, decisions and actions based on inclinations rather than on reason are heteronomous. KantÕs idealized au- tonomous agent, successfully checking desires and dispositions against the law of pure practical reason, clearly is out of place among patients who often are physically or psychologically vulnerable, and who may have impaired cognitive and volitional capacities. Patients have little hope of approximating such an ideal Ñ their abilities fall short of the enhanced capacities of KantÕs autonomous agent. It is doubtful that Kant actually expects finite rational beings to achieve this ideal, but he did think it a vision worthy of emulation. 18 I am not convinced, however, that we ought to counsel patients to strive in this manner. The capacity for reason is only one facet of human nature: we are more than our rational faculties. In addition, to divide our faculties into reason and inclination seems artificial, even misguided, since, as Susan Wendell expresses it, they are Òso intermingled and integrated in most human activities that such a division is rarely applicable and usually ob- scures the complexity of real people and their behaviourÓ(Wendell, 1987, p. 79). Moreover, valuing reason over inclination seems wrong-headed, since both are equally important for our survival and the quality of our human experiences. A fuller conception of patient autonomy is desirable for bioethics, one that more accurately reflects human experienceÑone which is more synergistic, as opposed to normatively dualistic, in its treat- ment of our inclinations and capacity for reason. Furthermore, we ought to consider whether an ideal of moral autonomy is desirable in bioethics. Ought health practitioners 19 to attempt to assess or monitor the moral autonomy of their patients in an effort to respect patient autonomy and promote patient welfare? Is it appropriate for health practi- tioners to judge patientsÕ moral values, choices or actions? In my view this would be an inappropriate goal. Health practitioners do not have any special qualifications for the role of moral expert or Òmoral police.Ó Even if it were possible to prepare them for such a role, the paternalism this model would make way for is inimical to KantÕs duty-based philosophy of freedom. 20 Assuming some remain unconvinced that KantÕs concept is not a wor- thy ideal, his concept certainly would need supplementation. Contempo- BARBARA SECKER 54 rary concern about respecting patient autonomy is motivated primarily by concern to promote and protect the rights and well-being of patients. While a model of moral autonomy like KantÕs may promote patientsÕ moral well- being, it may fall short in promoting physical, psychological or social well-being. In addition, the right to make morally autonomous decisions (that is, to recognize the validity of the moral law and decide to accept it for the sake of duty) is a rather narrow right considering the range of decision-making patients are confronted with in health contexts. Some decisions patients face arguably are moral decisions Ñ for example, wheth- er to have an abortion, request physician-assisted suicide, or to be truthful about medical history or particular diagnoses. However, many decisions would appear to be a matter of personal preference rather than a matter of morality Ñ for instance, whether to chose drug A or drug B, drug A or surgery, lumpectomy or mastectomy, treatment or further observation, to remain at home or go to a nursing home. 21 For most patients, the primary goal in interacting with health practitioners is not to deliberate about or revise their moral values, but rather to make decisions about and receive health care (Emanuel and Emanuel, 1995, p. 74). For the reasons given above, then, KantÕs concept of moral autonomy would appear, at worst, altogether inappropriate and, at best, inadequate. For those who are not persuaded, I turn now to consider whether KantÕs concept of moral autonomy would be amenable to assessment in health contexts. Could we appeal to KantÕs concept in order to determine which patients have the capacity for moral autonomy and/or which patients would be deciding or acting in a morally autonomous way with regard to particu- lar health-related decisions? In KantÕs view, finite rational beings have the capacity for moral auton- omy; this capacity is an inherent, general feature of such beings, but may or may not be exercised via particular decisions or actions. It is not clear whether Kant would consider patients rational beings (given their vulner- abilities and often diminished capacities), but it is likely that certain groups of patients Ñ infants, young children, those who are severely demented or comatose, for example Ñ would not be counted by Kant as rational be- ings. Assuming Kant would consider rational the remainder of the class of patients, we can continue to consider the applicability of his model for these patients at least. If we were able to detect KantÕs distinct brand of rationality in patients, then we would know they have the capacity for moral autonomy. Since, for Kant, to be a rational being is to have the capacity for autonomy, we can simplify this discussion by setting out KantÕs criterion for the latter: beings have the capacity for autonomy if and only if they have the capacity KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 55 to act on self-given, yet universal, principles (even when inclination is absent). Autonomous agents are able to take the Categorical Imperative as their fundamental maxim. Can we use KantÕs Categorical Imperative, then, to classify the maxims patients adopt in order to determine whether they have the capacity for autonomy and/or whether in a particular situation they would be deciding/ acting in a morally autonomous way? The logistics of attempting to use KantÕs concept to assess the moral autonomy of patients Ñ which we do in an effort to determine whether to act, first and foremost, to respect patient autonomy or to protect patient well-being Ñ present some interrelated epistemic and practical problems. We do not have direct access to pa- tientsÕ maxims, and neither can patients themselves, according to Kant, be absolutely certain about the nature and moral status of their maxims. The Òopacity of the human heartÓ undermines any attempt to assess the univer- salizability of maxims. Given that maxims are not observable, all we would be able to do is to evaluate what patients tell us about their maxims and perhaps how they act, 22 and attempt to infer whether their maxims con- form to the Categorical Imperative. But, maxims are not reliably inferable given that patients have imperfect self-knowledge, that the deception of self and others is possible, and that practitioners may misinterpret what they see and hear. In OÕNeillÕs words, KantÕs universalizability test is Òprimarily of use to agents in guiding their own moral deliberations, and can only be used most tentatively in assessing the moral worth of othersÕ action, where we are often sure only about specific outward aspects of action and not about the maximÓ (OÕNeill, 1989, p. 103). The problem of inference, however, is not unique to Kant (although we would need to wrestle with the problem in a unique way if we were to adopt his model). These limits to knowledge of self and others constitute the context in which we must make practical judgments about patientsÕ moral autonomy. The best we would be able to do, then, would be to assess patients by the maxims they reveal as their own in light of our ideal of the maxims of fully autonomous agents. If patientsÕ maxims appeared to pass the universalizability test, we would have to assume, for practical purpos- es, that conceptual and volitional inconsistencies had been ruled out, and thus that their maxims were at least not morally unacceptable. However, we could not know whether they would be autonomous in choosing or acting on that maxim for we cannot know whether they acted from duty or merely in accord with duty. A potential solution to this problem might be to assume that the class of mature, conscious, non-demented patients has the capacity for moral au- tonomy, and respect the decisions and actions of such patients. However, BARBARA SECKER 56 if we are concerned that certain features of patienthood and health con- texts may interfere with patients deciding or acting in morally autonomous ways in general or in particular instances, this assumption will not suit our purposes. We would want to know whether patients have the capacity to act autonomously in a particular situation or whether they would be acting autonomously, but KantÕs concept of moral autonomy lies beyond the realm of empirical observation. We cannot assess the moral autonomy of patients because moral autonomy is transempirical; in other words, we cannot know anything, strictly speaking, about a personÕs moral autono- my. If we are committed to expressing respect for the dignity of patients as morally autonomous beings, given the transempirical nature of KantÕs concept we must strive to do this by recognizing patient self-determina- tion, specifically decision-making capacity, which is more readily subject to empirical assessment. Kant would approve of this conclusion since, for him, there is an important connection between moral autonomy and self- determination. Respecting a personÕs capacity for self-determination is a way of expressing respect for her dignity as a morally autonomous being. The principle of respect for self-determination, then, should be used to bring about an empirical order of right, one which points indirectly to the dimension of moral autonomy which lies outside the empirical realm. The lack of practical relevance of KantÕs concept of moral autonomy 23 may well have led contemporary Kantian bioethicists to substitute the so- called Kantian concept of autonomy for KantÕs original. While the transem- pirical nature of KantÕs concept necessitates the move to respect patient self-determination, we need not appeal to the Kantian notion of autonomy as self-determination, outlined and critiqued above. VII. PROLEGOMENA TO A NEW PARADIGM So far, I have disentangled KantÕs original concept of moral autonomy from the contemporary Kantian concept of autonomy found in bioethics. I also have argued that neither concept ought to be appealed to in efforts to respect the autonomy of patients. In this final section, I hope to advance bioethics discourse by suggesting a direction we might pursue towards reconceptualizing patient autonomy. The general direction I suggest is characterized by a contextual, interac- tive understanding of autonomy Ñ one in which autonomy is not equated with independence, deliberative rationality or negative liberty. Beauchamp (1991), however, appears to hold that certain criteria Ñ much like those of KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 57 the Kantian concept described earlier Ñ are central to the notion of auton- omy: Whatever may in addition be packed into the concept, the autonomous person is one who is capable of independent, intentional, informed, and reasoned judgments and actions. Any viable theory of autonomous per- sons must accept something like these properties as necessary condi- tions of autonomy, because of their centrality to the concept (Beau- champ 1991, p. 60). It is not at all clear to me, however, that such features are necessary conditions of autonomy. While different accounts of autonomy share an abstract conceptual core Ñ the idea of self-government or self-determina- tion Ñ suggested by the etymology of the term, the content or criteria of a concept of autonomy will depend on the underlying view of the self. For the reasons given above, a defensible concept of patient autonomy would need to be built on a conception of the self which is significantly different from the rational individualist view of the self underlying the Kantian concept of autonomy. As Sherwin states (and as I argued earlier), Òactual people are not independent, and their decision-making does not always meet the norms that define rationalityÓ (Sherwin, 1992, p. 137). The alternative concept of patient autonomy I have in mind appeals to a more realistic view of the self as both separate and connected Ñ as neither wholly socially constituted, nor completely independent. This self is de- fined, in part, by its socio-political context and its relationships with oth- ers. On this view, people often make choices in the company (even with the assistance) of others who help shape their lives Ñ their characters, beliefs, values and goals (see also Sherwin, 1992, pp. 53, 137Ð157; Hoag- land, 1988, pp. 144Ð146). HoaglandÕs description of a self-in-community may be useful in articulat- ing some of the features of a view of the self which would give rise to a better model of autonomy with practical relevance for bioethics. 25 In con- structing her account of moral agency and choice, Hoagland invokes Òa self who is both elemental and related, who has a sense of herself making choic- es within a context created by communityÓ (Hoagland 1988, p.145). For Hoagland, the self is not essentially defined in terms of others, but it does emerge though interactions with them. HoaglandÕs term for this separate yet connected self is ÒautokoenonyÓ which means Òthe self in communityÓ: 26 An autokoenonous being is one who is aware of herself as one among others within a community that forms her ground of being, one who BARBARA SECKER 58 makes her decisions in consideration of her limitations as well as in consideration of the agendas and perceptions of others. She does not merge with others, nor does she estrange herself; she interacts with others in situations (Hoagland, 1988, p. 145; her emphasis). Sherwin describes what HoaglandÕs ÒautokoenonyÓ might mean in health contexts: autokoenony suggests an understanding of patients existing in a social world, where their ends and activities are defined in conjunction with others they trust. This view offers a more realistic perspective of pa- tients choosing in the company of others who help shape their lives; when patients are confronted with difficult decisions, physicians and patients might include in the decision-making process those others who are trusted by the patient (Sherwin, 1992, p. 156). 27 An alternative account of autonomy based on a view of self-in-communi- ty, as understood by thinkers like Hoagland and Sherwin, 28 would appear to have practical relevance for actual patients and to avoid some of the problems associated with the concepts of Kant and contemporary Kan- tians. The alternative model I envision would not require that patients have freedom of action Ñ that is, the ability to make their decisions effective in action. It would separate the question of whether patients are capable of autonomous decisionmaking from the question of whether they are able to effectuate their decisions, and it would focus on the former. As Hoagland argues, that we are unable to control certain factors which affect us, and which may determine whether we can carry out our decisions, does not mean that we are unable to make choices. An adequate concept of autonomy must focus on our ability to make decisions: choice is at the very core of the concept of Ômoral agency.Õ It is not because we are free and moral agents that we are able to make moral choices. Rather, it is because we make choices, choose from among alternatives, act in the face of limits, that we declare ourselves to be moral beings. That is what it means to be a moral being….[M]aking choices within limited situations is a matter of affirming moral agency, not undermining it (Hoagland, 1988, pp. 230Ð231; her emphasis). Such a model of decisional autonomy would not demand independence or self-sufficiency but rather would be compatible with certain dependencies and interdependencies. Agich brings to light some important interrelation- ships among autonomy, dependence and interdependence: KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 59 Maintaining a sense of autonomous well-being is consistent with de- pendencies on medication or professional care if those dependencies help to maintain a sense of functional integrity in the areas of life that individuals value (Agich, 1990, p. 16). Agich (1990) cites an example of a person who uses a wheelchair and who requires assistance from others in a number of activities of daily living. This assistance, however, enables her to work for a particular charitable organization with which she identifies strongly. Her dependency does not interfere with (in fact, it promotes) her participation in what has meaning to her, and her inability to undertake certain tasks alone Ñ such as shop- ping or bathing Ñ is less significant to her than her ability to work. Thus, certain dependencies and interdependencies in personal and professional relationships can be empowering Ñ they actually can enhance meaningful autonomy. This alternative concept of decisional autonomy Ñ given the view of the self-in-community on which it is based Ñ would characterize deci- sionmaking as cooperative rather than antagonistic. This would help to undermine the present struggle for control over decisionmaking. That is, the main issue would no longer be whether patients ought to make the decision (autonomy) or whether the decision ought to be given to the health practitioner (beneficence or paternalism) but, rather, how to empower patients to make their decisions, how to foster decisional autonomy. 29 The main concern, then, would not be whether patients are autonomous or nonautonomous Ñ whether they are to be allowed to par- ticipate or not in decisions about their health care Ñ but, rather, whether all that could be done to enhance autonomous decisionmaking capacity has been done and whether patients can use these resources to make a decision. 30 The emphasis on enhancing the autonomous decisionmaking capacity of patients would bring a positive dimension to the concept of autonomy (lacking at least in the concept of contemporary Kantians). That is, if we really are committed to fostering autonomous decisionmaking capacity and its realization, then, in many (if not most) cases, more is required than the negative dimension of noninterference. This idea is captured in Ag- ichÕs call for a richer concept of autonomy which would view Òchoice as a problem of providing options that are meaningful rather than as an issue of removing obstacles to choice or impediments to actionÓ (Agich, 1990, p. 12). An adequate alternative approach to autonomy in health care settings would demand the provision of resources needed for the exercise of pa- tientsÕ autonomously-made decisions. This would involve looking beyond BARBARA SECKER 60 the artificial boundaries of Òthe health care contextÓ to the larger moral and socio-political context. The set of the criteria I outline below is my attempt to capture the general nature of the alternative model of autonomy sketched above. On this contextual, interactive view of decisional autonomy, a patient who chooses autonomously is able to: 1. recognize the nature of the decision to be made (i.e., that there are options and what those options are), alone or with the assistance of others; 2. respond to the need to make a decision by undertaking to make such choice, alone or with the assistance of others; 3. communicate and interact with others, if necessary, toward making a decision; 4. understand information relevant to the decision to be made and use this understanding to consider the likely pros and cons of available options, alone or with the assistance of others; 5. arrive at a decision, alone or with the assistance of others, which (a) is free from central contradiction, and (b) follows an uncoerced decision- making process that avoids unresolvable means-ends errors in reason- ing; and 6. resolve to make the decision effective in action alone or with the assist- ance of others. To summarize, this alternative account of autonomy can be characterized as 1) procedural (versus substantive), 2) decisional (rather then execution- al), 3) contextual and interactive (versus abstract and individualistic), and 4) decision-specific (as opposed to global or general). To elaborate briefly on this characterization, this procedural model recognizes more than one conception of Òthe good life;Ó it does not necessarily preclude choosing any particular end in recognizing decisional autonomy. Its procedural re- quirements are less constraining (than with either KantÕs or the Kantian concept), reflecting a broader understanding of autonomous decision-mak- ing and allowing changes in patientsÕ beliefs, values and goals. It does not equate autonomy with morality or with deliberative rationality. As long as patients are able to understand and consider information relevant to the decision at hand, they may base their decision on this understanding and consideration, or on other considerations, such as emotion, inclination, moral or other values, religious beliefs, and/or the opinions of others who may be involved in the decision-making process. In focusing on decisional rather than executional autonomy, this con- cept does not require freedom of action and may be better able (than more KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 61 robust models) to help identify social and cultural factors affecting pa- tientsÕ abilities to exercise their autonomously-made decisions. Decisional autonomy is, in part, a relational, not simply an intrinsic, property of patients. Further, on this contextual, interactive model, dependence and interdependence do not necessarily preclude autonomous decision-mak- ing; in fact, certain relationships so characterized may even be necessary for such decision-making. Finally, the label ÒautonomousÓ is affixed to particular instances of patientsÕ choosing Ñ autonomy is decision-specif- ic, rather than global. That is, it is understood as a feature of patients in some aspects of their life, rather than as a feature of whole persons over their entire life. Questions this alternative model must address, in addition to its theoret- ical underdevelopment, include: the potential for conflict, manipulation or unwarranted paternalism (given the emphasis on cooperative decision- making); the role of socialization; the problem of inferring understanding (refer to criterion 4); and the designation of a threshold for decisional autonomy. In addition, as Sherwin points out, a model of autonomy that focuses on empowering patients Ñ on strengthening their agency Ñ to make decisions that benefit them will Òrequire radical rethinking of the patient-physician relationship and development of improved patterns of communication and mutual respectÓ (Sherwin, 1992, p. 156). In conclusion, the principle of respect for the autonomy of personsÑa legacy of KantÑis of fundamental importance in bioethics. However, we need a concept that is adequate for assessing patient autonomy as deci- sion-making capacity in health contexts. Reconceptualization of this key conceptÑmediated by a commitment to practical relevanceÑmust be un- dertaken toward providing bioethics with a workable, defensible model of patient autonomy. I submit that it would be fruitful to begin along the lines sketched above. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank Cheryl Cline, Heiner Bielefeldt, William Harvey, Jan Marta, Kath- ryn Morgan, Gordon Nagel, Bjorn Ramberg, Michael Stingl, Susan Wendell and three anonymous reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts or sections of this paper. I am grateful to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for its support from 1994Ð1997 during which time I produced this manuscript. BARBARA SECKER 62 NOTES 1. As Tom Beauchamp points out, the notion of autonomy has become so diverse that it is often used to refer to a duty, a right, a freedom, a disposition, or an action. He identifies the following explications of the central meaning of ÒautonomyÓ in con- temporary moral philosophy: 1) ÒauthenticityÓ; 2) Òobedience to self-prescribed lawÓ; 3) Òobedience to moral lawÓ; 4) Òpersonal choiceÓ; 5) Òthe freedom to chooseÓ; 6) Òhaving preferences about oneÕs preferencesÓ; 7) Òchoosing and creating oneÕs own moral positionÓ; 8) Òmental healthÓ; 9) ÒconscientiousnessÓ; 10) Òresponsible ac- tionÓ; and 11) Òaccepting responsibility for oneÕs views and actionsÓ (Beauchamp, 1991, p. 63). 2. For example, a BIOETHICSLINE database search (i.e., a computerized literature retrieval system) for Òautonomy or informed consent or competenceÓ paired with ÒKant(ian)Ó reveals three times as many citations than when paired with ÒJohn Stuart MillÓ and twice as many than when paired with ÒGerald Dworkin.Ó For some exam- ples of bioethics books and articles which engage with a Kantian concept of autono- my, refer to Mappes and DeGrazia (1996), and the references listed in note 10. 3. Beauchamp and Childress, however, write: ÒIn contemporary biomedical ethics the word autonomy typically refers to what makes a life oneÕs own; viz. that it is shaped by personal preferences and choices. This conception of autonomy is emphatically not KantÕsÓ (Beauchamp and Childress, 1996, p. 58). The authors then provide a brief two-paragraph description of KantÕs contrast between moral autonomy and heterono- my. However, what the authors describe as autonomyÕs typical referent in bioethics is not the contemporary Kantian conception of autonomy (which I describe in the sec- tion titled ÒThe Kantian Concept of AutonomyÓ). Because it is more common to conflate KantÕs concept of autonomy and the contemporary Kantian one, I focus on making this distinction and analyzing in depth its relevance to the principle of respect for autonomy in bioethics. 4. I am indebted to OÕNeill (1989; 1991), Hill (1989), Wolff (1973), Beck (1960) and Allision (1990; 1996) whose commentaries have helped structure my thinking about KantÕs moral philosophy. 5. In this section, I provide a brief account of what I take to be KantÕs concept of autonomy. I am aware that there is considerable controversy over how he conceived autonomy, and that certain of his claims about autonomy are often questioned by critics. Due to limitations of space, this section is more explanatory than critical; I reserve my critical discussion for the next section since the purpose of this paper is to assess the practical relevance of KantÕs concept of autonomy for bioethics. 6. To avoid confusion, I will refer to the primary works of Kant by name (abbreviated), rather than by author and date: Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals (ÒFMMÓ); Critique of Practical Reason (ÒCPrRÓ); The Doctrine of Virtue (ÒDVÓ). 7. Later, in the Critique of Practical Reason, Kant argues against the possibility of such a derivation, and claims instead that autonomy, freedom and the categorical impera- tive presuppose or imply each other. 8. One acts heteronomously if one fails to act for the sake of duty. If such an act is in accord with the moral law, oneÕs action is morally correct but without moral worth; if the act does not conform to the moral law, it is morally reprehensible. 9. I am interested in Kantian autonomy as presented in influential bioethics textbooks because it is in these volumes that at least some space is devoted to explaining ethical concepts, principles, and theories; also, these are the theoretical tools that the most visible academic bioethicists are handing to clinicians and students of bioethics. I KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 63 selected this passage because it gives a relatively detailed description of so-called Kantian autonomy. Sketchier accounts bearing the label ÒKantianÓ can be found in, e.g., Beauchamp and Walters (1994, p. 23) and Munson (1996, p. 40). 10. For some examples which appear similar to the Mappes and DeGrazia account, refer to: Gauthier (1993, pp. 23Ð24); Jinnett-Sack (1993, pp. 98Ð103); Munson (1996, pp. 40, 59); Nash (1990, p. 118); and Norden (1995, pp. 180Ð182). 11. GauthierÕs description is similar: ÒWe recognize that as a free and rational being the other [person] has the capacity to choose his or her own goals and projects on the basis of moral principles known by reason and, thus, to act on a personal conception of what is right. Only when we respect and do not interfere with othersÕ goals, projects, and actions, chosen by their own conception of what is right, are we respect- ing their autonomy as rational agentsÓ (1993, p. 24; my emphasis). 12. Jinnett-Sack states that, in bioethics, the predominant view of the autonomous sub- ject is of one who is Òsolitary, imminently educable and capable of self-knowledge;Ó she cites Iris Murdoch as attributing this view to the ÒmarriageÓ of Kant, utilitarian- ism and modern psychology (1993, p. 101; my emphasis). Moreover, Mappes and DeGraziaÕs description of the autonomous individual as able to resist manipulation or coercion by others suggests a considerable degree of independence (1996, p. 28). 13. See also Herman, 1991, p. 792. 14. What accounts for the confusion or gap between KantÕs notion of autonomy and that of contemporary Kantians writing in bioethics? OÕNeill suggests that this is partly due to the fact that Òmodern protagonists of ÔKantianÕ ethics are mainly, some of them exclusively, interested in rights,Ó whereas rights are only one element of KantÕs duty-based philosophy of freedom (OÕNeill, 1989, p. 66). 15. My focus here is the applicability and adequacy of the Kantian concept in health care contexts. I am more interested in the practical problems involved in applying this concept than I am in its more abstract conceptual flaws; thus, I will be concerned with the latter only to the extent that they affect or create the former. 16. This criticism is not without basis. Refer, for example, to KomradÕs (1983) ÒA de- fence of medical paternalism: Maximizing patientsÕ autonomy.Ó Also refer to Cassell (1977, p. 17) who holds that illness impairs a personÕs authentic self, independence, knowledge, understanding, and reason, thereby significantly diminishing autonomy. He proposes that Òthe best way to preserve autonomy is to cure the patient of the disease that impairs autonomy and return him to his normal lifeÓ which may well mean treating the patient against his will (Cassell, 1977, p. 18). 17. For further development of the above criticisms and other critiques of Kantian auton- omy (or similar accounts), refer to: Agich (1990); Hoagland (1988); Kittay and Mey- ers (eds.) (1987, ch. 8 and 9); Sherwin (1992, ch. 7); and Weinberg (1988). 18. The question whether Kant meant for his concept of autonomy to be normative for the moral life of human beings is somewhat beside the point Ñ the purpose of having a concept of autonomy in bioethics is a normative one. 19. For the purposes of this argument, I include bioethicists in the class of health practi- tioners. 20. For a discussion of the potential promise and pitfalls of a similar model Ñ the deliberative model of physician-patient relationship Ñ refer to Emanuel and Emanuel (1995). In this model, Ò[t]he physicianÕs objectives include suggesting why certain health-related values are more worthy and should be aspired toÉ.The conception of patient autonomy is moral self-development; the patient is empowered not simply to follow unexamined preferences or examined values, but to consider, through dia- logue, alternative health-related values, their worthiness, and their implications for BARBARA SECKER 64 treatmentÓ (Emanuel and Emanuel, 1995, p. 69). While the focus here is on worthi- ness of health-related values rather than the worthiness of maxims in relation to the Categorical Imperative, both models risk paternalism since attempts to persuade may well be experienced by patients as attempts to manipulate or coerce, given power dynamics in favor of the professional in the practitioner-patient relationship. 21. Another way of expressing this might be to say that many health care decisions would appear to revolve around hypothetical rather than categorical imperatives. 22. I say ÒperhapsÓ because inferring maxims from actions is not foolproof. For example, a patient might comply with her physicianÕs ÒordersÓ for the sake of the duties of self- preservation and promise-keeping; whereas, another patient might comply with her physicianÕs orders because she is simply in the habit of following the orders of authority figures or because she fears the wrath of her doctor or family members. Both patients perform the same actions of compliance, but, according to Kant, the first patient who acts from duty acts autonomously while the second patient who acts only in accord with duty acts heteronomously. 23. To say that appealing to KantÕs model of autonomy is undesirable and impracticable with respect to patients, is not to say that KantÕs ideal of the morally autonomous agent has no place whatsoever. In fact, KantÕs model might be of value for health care professionalsÑwho generally are in less vulnerable or compromised positions than patientsÑand who frequently find themselves in moral quandaries regarding their duties as professionals. However, given that Kant provided little guidance on how morally relevant maxims are to be formulatedÑand given that different formulations may yield different results when tested for consistencyÑit is not clear that KantÕs Categorical Imperative can help us decide whether an action is morally required, morally forbidden, or morally permissible. For further discussion of this problem refer, for example, to Nell (1975), OÕNeill (1989), Wolff (1973), and Hoffmaster (1990, pp. 245-46). 24. Given the context of this passage, it seems clear that Sherwin is referring to tradition- al philosophical notions of rationality Ñ instrumental rationality and rationality of ends. 25. Naturally, a more developed account of the nature of the self in community is needed both to Òfill outÓ and to justify such an alternative model. Central questions include: In what ways, and to what extent, is self-identity constituted or defined by communi- ty? In what ways, and to what extent, is it chosen? How do social experience and personal choice interact? What, if any, moral consequences follow from responses to these questions? (Pursuing any one of these questions leads one into issues of great complexity, well beyond the scope of this paper.) 26. Greek, ÒautoÓ (self), ÒkoinoniaÓ (community, or any group whose members have something in common) (Hoagland, 1988, p. 145). 27. Since not all patients have people who care about them, that they can trust and rely on, it is important that Sherwin adds: ÒPatients who are isolated, that is, who have no others they can trust, could be helped to form relationships that would foster their decision-making in an interactive way. Self-help groups of patients with a common condition, for instance, usually provide patients with the opportunity to explore the complexities of their decisions in a nonhierarchical environmentÓ (Sherwin, 1992, p. 156). 28. For detailed development of an alternative view of autonomy as relationalÑbuilt on a relational view of the self Ñ see Sherwin, 1998. 29. This is not to say that reconceiving autonomy along these alternative lines would itself eliminate the conflict between patients and practitioners over decisionmaking KANTÕS CONCEPT OF AUTONOMY 65 power. An alternative model of autonomy which assigns less theoretical weight to such conflict may contribute to diffusing this Òpower struggle,Ó but, clearly, before the focus in health care moves from awarding decisional authority to enhancing autonomous decisionmaking capacity, certain compatible political, economic and educational structures would need to be in place. 30. Note that it does not follow that the patient who is unable to make a decision even after every effort has been made to foster his/her decisionmaking capacity should be excluded altogether from the decisionmaking process. 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No Longer Patient: Feminist Ethics and Health Care, Temple Univer- sity Press, Philadelphia. Sherwin, S. (ed.) (1998). The Politics of WomenÕs Health: Exploring Agency and Au- tonomy, Temple University Press, Philadelphia. Weinberg, J.K. (1988). ÔAutonomy as a different voice: Women, disabilities and deci- sions,Õ in M. Fine and A. Asch (eds.), Women with Disabilities: Essays in Psychol- ogy, Culture, and Politics, Temple University Press, Philadelphia, pp. 269Ð296. Wendell, S. (1987). ÔA (qualified) defense of liberal feminism,Õ Hypatia 2, 65Ð93. Wolff, R.P. (1973). The Autonomy of Reason: A Commentary on KantÕs Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals, Harper & Row Publishers, New York. Copyright ofJournal ofMedicine &Philosophy isthe property ofOxford University Press/ USA anditscontent maynotbecopied oremailed tomultiple sitesorposted toalistserv without thecopyright holder’sexpresswrittenpermission. However,usersmayprint, download, oremail articles forindividual use.
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Utilitarianism for Animals, Kantianism for People? Harming Animals and Humans for the Greater Good Lucius Caviola Harvard University and University of Oxford Guy Kahane University of Oxford Jim A. C. Everett University of Kent and University of Oxford Elliot Teperman and Julian Savulescu University of Oxford Nadira S. Faber University of Exeter and University of Oxford Most people hold that it is wrong to sacrifice some humans to save a greater number of humans. Do people also think that it is wrong to sacrifice some animals to save a greater number of animals, or dothey answer such questions about harm to animals by engaging in a utilitarian cost-benefit calculation?Across 10 studies ( N 4,662), using hypothetical and real-life sacrificial moral dilemmas, we found that participants considered it more permissible to harm a few animals to save a greater number of animalsthan to harm a few humans to save a greater number of humans. This was explained by a reduced generalaversion to harm animals compared with humans, which was partly driven by participants perceivinganimals to suffer less and to have lower cognitive capacity than humans. However, the effect persistedeven in cases where animals were described as having greater suffering capacity and greater cognitivecapacity than some humans, and even when participants felt more socially connected to animals than tohumans. The reduced aversion to harming animals was thus also partly due to speciesism —the tendency to ascribe lower moral value to animals due to their species-membership alone. In sum, our studies showthat deontological constraints against instrumental harm are not absolute but get weaker the less peoplemorally value the respective entity. These constraints are strongest for humans, followed by dogs,chimpanzees, pigs, and finally inanimate objects. Keywords: moral judgments, utilitarianism, harm aversion, speciesism, human–animal relations Supplemental materials: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0000988.supp Utilitarianism tells us to always maximize the good. This is an attractive moral aim in many cases—few would deny that, for example, we should try to save as many lives as we can, and generally minimize harm to others. In some cases, however, most people think that it would be wrong to maximize the good because this would violate what moral philosophers call “deontological side constraints” ( Nozick, 1974 )—moral rules that forbid harming, torturing, or killing innocents, even for a good end. A great deal of recent psychological research has examined whether and under what circumstances people hold deontological constraints (e.g., Greene, 2014 ). For example, in the famous footbridge trolley case ( Thomson, 1984 ) a large majority of people are reluctant to push one person off a bridge to save the lives of five people trapped on the tracks of an oncoming train ( Greene, 2009 ), and it has even been claimed that such constraints are universal and innate ( Mikhail, 2007 ). What has not been studied yet is whether people also apply deontological rules to nonhuman animals (from now on simply “animals”). Are people as reluctant to harm animals to save X Lucius Caviola, Department of Psychology, Harvard University, and Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford; Guy Kahane,Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford; Jim A. C. Everett,Department of Psychology, University of Kent, and Uehiro Centre for Prac-tical Ethics, University of Oxford; Elliot Teperman and Julian Savulescu,Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford; Nadira S. Faber,College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, and UehiroCentre for Practical Ethics, University of Oxford.All data, analysis code, and experimental materials are available for download at: https://osf.io/nt69s/ . Lucius Caviola, Guy Kahane, and Nadira S. Faber planned the studies, interpreted the data, and wrote the article. Lucius Caviola collected and analyzed the data. Lucius Caviola, Jim A. C. Everett, Elliot Teperman, and Nadira S. Faber planned Studies 1, 2, 4, 5. All authors provided critical feedback on the article. We thank Stefan Schubert for his comments and Fabiene Sandkühler for her help with statistical analysis and with collect- ing the data for Study 6. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Lucius Caviola, Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. E-mail: [email protected] This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General © 2020 American Psychological Association 2021, Vol. 150, No. 5, 1008–1039 ISSN: 0096-3445 http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xge0000988 1008 This article was published Online First October 19, 2020. a greater number of animals as they are for humans? And if indeed people do accept such constraints on harm to animals, are these deontological constraints similar in structure and strength to those that protect humans? Kant (1785/1870) offered one answer to these questions. He argued that the source of the deontological constraints that protect us from being sacrificed for the sake of others is our unique rational nature— our rationality makes us priceless and, therefore, we cannot be an input into a utilitarian cost-benefit calculation. On Kant’s own view, this meant that, because animals are not rational, they do not morally matter in their own right, though he frowned upon gratuitous cruelty to animals because it could make us more willing to harm humans. The philosopher Robert Nozick (1974) famously discussed an alternative principle he referred to as: “utilitarianism for animals, Kantianism for people.” On this view, which Nozick himself did not entirely endorse, animals do matter, but they matter very differently than humans. As nonrational individuals, they do not enjoy deontological protections and can be entered into utilitarian calculations. The philosopher Judith Jarvis Thomson similarly writes that, unlike humans, “animals do not have claims to not be killed . . . Would it be permissible to kill one chicken to save five chicken? I think it would” ( Thomson, 1990 ). It is clear that people value animals less than humans. This universal phenomenon shows across various contexts and has been investigated by both philosophers (e.g., Singer, 1975 ) and psychol- ogists (e.g., Amiot & Bastian, 2015 ;Caviola, Everett, & Faber, 2019 ;Dhont, Hodson, & Leite, 2016 ). Psychological research has shown that to large extent people morally prioritize humans over animals simply on the basis of species-membership—a tendency referred to as speciesism (Caviola et al., 2019 ;Horta, 2010 ;Singer, 1975 ). Still it remains an open question how exactly people value animals (cf. Goodwin, 2015 ). In particular, we are interested in what types of deontological constraints against harming animals or humans people may hold. We focus on the context of sacrificial moral dilemmas to study whether people are willing to harm a few animals or humans to save many animals or humans, and whether this willingness is uniform across these decision contexts. It is obvious that people are more willing to sacrifice animals than humans for a fixed benefit, for example, to save many humans. However, it is unclear (a) to what extent people are willing to harm a few animals to save many animals, and (b) how this tendency compares to their willingness to harm a few humans to save many humans. Current research is compatible with multiple answers to these questions. Are people’s intuitions about such dilemmas cor- rectly captured by Kant, utilitarianism, Nozick, or by some other view? In this article we systematically test a range of possible descriptive ethical views of how people apply deontological con- straints against harm to humans and animals. Why is this of interest? First, answering this question can shed important light on the psychology of moral judgment more gen- erally, and of moral status specifically. Typically, moral psychol- ogy has focused on scenarios involving human characters lacking concrete identities (cf. Hester & Gray, 2020 ). It is likely, though, that people are sensitive to who those characters are. In this work, we investigate whether people take into account the species- membership of the characters at stake. Do deontological con- straints pervade all moral thinking, or do they only apply in the human context? If deontological constraints apply only to humans, how does morality operate with regards to other species? Focusing on dilemmas where we can sacrifice some humans to save a greater number, Greene (2014) has suggested that people engage in either utilitarian or deontological modes of moral thinking, and that when the two compete, the intuitive, deontological mode typically prevails. If deontological constraints apply only to hu- mans, this would mean that this dual process picture applies only in the human domain, and that moral judgment in the animal domain is the result of a single process of utilitarian cost-benefit analysis. Conversely, if deontological constraints do apply to an- imals, this would raise the psychological question of whether these deontological constraints apply in the same way to animals as they do to humans. Moreover, because this would show that, contra Kant, people do not base deontological constraints in rationality or other higher cognitive capacity, it would raise the further question of what is the basis of such constraints—is it mere suffering capacity (i.e., sentience), the existence or lack of a social relation- ship with the potential victim, or something else? Second, how people think about the moral status of animals is of intrinsic interest. Animals are routinely harmed to benefit humans (e.g., for consumption or for medical experiments), and in some cases animals are harmed to benefit other animals. It is not yet clear whether most people nevertheless hold that there are moral constraints on when and whether such harm is permissible, and what psychological processes underlie such intuitions. Under- standing these psychological processes may have potential practi- cal implications. For example, certain wildlife conservation poli- cies allow the killing of predator animals like wolves in order to protect other animal species. Other cases exist in the context of livestock: Should a farmer be allowed to kill a few pigs infected by the swine flu in order to prevent many more pigs to be infected and killed? Should it be legal to experiment on a few chickens in order to benefit (or bring into existence) many more chickens? Another real-world case is the question of whether it is ethically more problematic to consume certain animals than others. For example, a cow produces about 200 times as much meat as a chicken, which means that producing the same amount of meat requires killing far fewer individuals in the case of cows compared to in the case of chickens. Depending on the relative strengths in deontological constraints against harm that people hold for these animals, sacri- ficing certain animals to benefit humans (or other animals) may be more problematic than sacrificing others. When Is Harm Toward Humans and Animals Permissible? In order to investigate how people think about harm to animals versus to humans, we first need to set out the theoretical options (see Table 1 ). Our aim is to try to identify the moral views that are most consistent with lay people’s intuitions. The first two views we will mention are well-known philosophical positions that we include for completeness sake even if they are unlikely to be psychologically accurate. The remaining views are all plausible descriptions of people’s intuitions and have sometimes even been described as such. Note that we are not suggesting that people explicitly endorse one of these moral views. Rather, we ask which moral view most closely aligns with the way people think about harm to humans versus to animals. Why this might be the case, and what underlying psychological mechanisms cause these judg- ments, are further questions that we will address below. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1009 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS The first possibility is that people’s intuitions are best captured by utilitarianism . On this account, the same harm matters equally, regardless of who suffers it (weighted by their degree of sen- tience)—whether humans or animals ( Bentham, 1780 ). This view is antispeciesist, meaning that species-membership itself should not influence the moral status of an individual ( Regan & Singer, 1989 ). If people were strict utilitarians, they would consider it permissible (or even required) to sacrifice both humans and ani- mals to promote the greater good (of both humans and animals). It is unlikely, however, that this view captures the intuitions of most people since, as described above, there is considerable evidence that people accept deontological constraints against harming hu- mans for the greater good (e.g., Greene, 2014 ), and people tend to value animals less than humans ( Caviola et al., 2019 ). Another possibility is that people’s intuitions can be described by Kant’s view . On this approach, only humans matter morally and therefore deserve deontological protection, whereas animals are just seen as objects that can be used to our own ends ( Kant, 1785/1870 ). The source of the value for humans is the fact that we, but not animals, are rational individuals and possess advanced cognitive capacity. This, however, is also implausible as an account of most people’s views because people believe that animals do matter morally at least to some extent ( Caviola, Schubert, Kahane, & Faber, 2020 ). Yet another possibility is that people’s intuitions can be de- scribed by a view we can call cross species deontology . On this account, the same deontological principles apply in the same way to all species. Neither humans nor animals should be sacrificed for the greater good of either. Like utilitarianism, this view is anti- speciesist because species-membership itself should make no dif- ference (for a similar view, see Regan, 1986 ). Abolitionist animal rights activists tend to endorse similar moral positions (e.g., Fran- cione, 1995 ). This again is unlikely to capture the common view given that people on average think that it’s permissible to harm animals to benefit humans, for example, via medical testing ( Cavi- ola et al., 2019 ). There are, however, at least three ways to capture this intuitive moral difference between humans and animals while still ascribing some moral significance to animals, contra Kant. The first is the Nozick (1974) suggestion, discussed above, that deontology applies only to humans, while utilitarianism applies to animals. When it comes to animals, we should simply maximize utility— even by sacrificing some for the greater good. But when we turn to humans, this is forbidden. Many moral philosophers take Nozick’s suggestion very seriously (cf. Kagan, 2019 ;Killoren & Streiffer, 2020 ;McMa- han, 2002 ;Thomson, 1990 ) and the Nuffield Council on Bioethics has even called utilitarian cost-benefit analysis the “cornerstone” of re- search on animals ( Kilkenny, Browne, Cuthill, Emerson, & Altman, 2010 ;Nuffield Council on Bioethics, 2005 ). Moral philosophers often assume that Nozick’s suggestion reflects people’s intuitions, and that it best captures the commonsense view about animals ( Kagan, 2019 ; Killoren & Streiffer, 2020 ). For example, people generally consider keeping animals in well-run zoos as morally permissible. Keeping innocent humans imprisoned, in contrast, is generally considered repugnant even if they were kept very happy. Another example is animal research. Most Western jurisdictions have a near absolute prohibition of more-than-minimal research on children who, like animals, cannot give consent ( Gennet & Altavilla, 2016 )— even if it could be beneficial in expectation. Regulations and intuitions con- cerning research on animals are much more permissive ( Varner, 1994 ). A second possible view is that there is a hierarchy of moral status (cf. Kagan, 2019 ). Individuals that are lower in the hierarchy (e.g., pigs) can be sacrificed for the sake of those higher up (e.g., humans). 1 But within each level of moral status, the deontological constraints offer the same protections (i.e., it’s wrong to sacrifice a pig to save five pigs), and these protections apply to the same degree. We call this multilevel uniform deontology . A final, more complex view, which we call multilevel weighted deontology , is that the deontological protections are not absolute, and get weaker the lower the level of moral status. As we go down the hierarchy, the less stringent the deontological constraints. According to this view, people would consider harming animals to save many animals neither completely permissible nor completely wrong (as multilevel uniform deontology would), but instead somewhere in between. Further, the lower the moral status of the animal in question, the more permissible they would consider harming it to save many animals with the same moral status (i.e., it is more permissible to sacrifice one cow to save five others than to sacrifice one human to save five others 2). In cases where the moral status of a being is very low (as e.g., with certain animals or objects), the implications of the 1Note that some philosophers define moral status in terms of the deontological protections that individuals enjoy. We, in contrast, assumethat moral status is a more abstract construct which determines the extent to which people perceive it permissible or required to harm or help acertain individual. Moreover, moral status relates to beliefs about the moralstatus people attribute to individuals in an absolute sense and not beliefsabout having special obligations to certain individuals. For example, peo-ple might think it is justified to prioritize family members over strangerswhile still believing that both possess the same moral status and rights.2The weighted deontological constraints can show both in terms of a changing degree of permissibility of harming a few to save many but also in terms of a changing threshold of the minimum number of beings that need to be saved in order to make it permissible to harm a few. Forexample, people consider it more permissible to harm one cow to save fivecows than to harm one human to save five humans (changing degree ofpermissibility), and people believe that a lower number of saved cows isrequired to make it permissible to kill ten cows than the number of savedhumans that is required to make it permissible to kill then humans (chang-ing threshold). Table 1 Moral Views of When It Is Permissible to Harm Humans and Animals Harm: Humans Animals Animals To save: Humans Animals Humans Utilitarianism ✓✓✓ Kant’s view X ✓✓ Cross species deontology X X XNozick’s slogan X ✓✓ Multilevel uniform deontology X X ✓ Multilevel weighted deontology weighted weighted ✓ Note . Utilitarianism and cross species deontology consider humans and animals to have equal moral status (assuming they are equally sentient). Allother views consider humans to have higher moral status than animals(even if they are equally sentient). While Kant thought that the moral statusof animals is not fundamentally different from that of objects, he did thinkthat harming animals gratuitously is wrong on instrumental grounds, be-cause it can make us more willing to harm humans. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1010 CAVIOLA ET AL. multilevel weighted deontology will resemble those of Nozick’s slo- gan because the deontological constraints will be low or nonexistent. These three hypotheses have not yet been tested. Our own hypothesis is that multilevel weighted deontology is the view that describes people’s intuitions best. A growing body of evidence suggests that emotional aversion to harming others plays a key role in driving deontological constraints against harming few humans to save a greater number ( Crockett, 2013 ;Cushman, 2013 ;Greene, 2014 ;Wiech et al., 2013 ). Aversion to harm is a matter of degree, and many people clearly feel some aversion to harming animals through direct, “personal” acts, even if to a considerably lesser degree than in the human case. If so, it seems unlikely that they would approach sacrificial choices involving animals in a purely utilitarian manner, nor that the deontological inhibitions against such harm would be as strong as in the human case. We therefore expect people to consider it permissible to harm animals to benefit humans and that they consider it somewhat, but not completely, permissible to harm animals to save many animals with the same moral status. Because people value animals much less than hu- mans, we assumed, the deontological constraints they ascribe to them are likely weaker even in intraspecies cases. Deontological constraints are thus not absolute but can get weighted and can sometimes be overturned ( Holyoak & Powell, 2016 ;Kahane, 2015 ). For example, people are likely to consider it less wrong to harm a few humans to save a very large number of humans ( Trémolière & Bonnefon, 2014 ). Similarly, we expect that they will neither have absolutely strong nor nonexistent deonto- logical constraints against harming animals even in the intraspe- cies context but rather moderately strong constraints. Were we to find, however, that people roughly have the same deontological constraints for humans and animals in the intraspecies context, or always find it entirely permissible to sacrifice few animals to save a larger number, that would falsify multilevel weighted deontol- ogy. Potential Psychological Mechanisms The different moral views discussed above leave the question unanswered what the underlying psychological mechanisms are. So far, no studies have systematically explored judgments in sacrificial dilemmas that involve animals. An exception is a recent study, in which participants were presented with two mice cages attached to an electric shock machine ( Bostyn, Sevenhant, & Roets, 2018 ). Participants were informed that, as a default, the five mice in one of the cages would receive a painful electric shock unless participants decided to intervene and push a button that would instead redirect the electrical current to the other case that contains just one mouse. Eight-four percent of participants pushed the button. In contrast, Bostyn, Sevenhant, and Roets (2018) found that when the same situation was described hypothetically, only 66% said that they would push the button. However, because the study did not directly compare cases involving humans against cases involving animals, we cannot draw a clear conclusion from it. Further, this study involved an “impersonal” moral dilemma and multiple studies have found that most people regard such harm as permissible even in in the human case. De Freitas, DeScioli, Nemirow, Massenkoff, & Pinker, 2017 found that people consider it more wrong to kill a human to save five humans than to kill a cow to save five humans in a footbridge trolley case. Their studies did not investigate cases where both the victims and beneficiaries are either animals or humans, which is the main focus of our research. As mentioned above, previous research on sacrificial moral dilemmas has identified a central role for harm aversion in ex- plaining moral judgments in sacrificial moral dilemmas ( Crockett, 2013 ;Cushman, 2013 ;Greene, 2014 ). The more aversive people are to harm the few, the less willing they are to harm them for the greater good. When harm aversion is reduced, such as in cases where the harm is less personal (e.g., when one has to hit a switch to harm), people are more willing to harm the few for the greater good, than if the harm is more personal (e.g., when one has to physically push someone). There is, therefore, considerable evi- dence that, in the human case, the judgments that mirror deonto- logical constraints reflect aversion to harm. Thus, it is plausible that this is also the case when we turn to animals. Therefore, one possible explanation for why people might be more willing to harm a few animals to save more animals than to harm a few humans to save more humans could be that they have a weaker aversion to harm animals in general. Studies have shown that people perceive humans to be more deserving of prevention of harm than animals ( Caviola et al., 2019 ;Crimston, Bain, Hornsey, & Bastian, 2016 ;Everett, Caviola, Savulescu, & Faber, 2018 ). Further, people also endorse harming animals to save humans ( Awad et al., 2018 ;Petrinovich, O’Neill, & Jorgensen, 1993 ; Topolski, Weaver, Martin, & McCoy, 2013 ). If reduced harm aversion for animals makes such harm seem more morally permissible, this raises the further question of why harm aversion for animals is weaker. One possibility is that people are more willing to harm animals than humans because they perceive animals to suffer less than humans and to have a lower cognitive capacity than humans. Both philosophers as well as psychologists ( H. M. Gray, Gray, & Wegner, 2007 ;K. Gray, Young, & Waytz, 2012 ) have emphasized the importance of suf- fering capacity (or sentience) and cognitive capacity (or intelli- gence/rationality) for moral status attribution. Indeed, it has been shown that people tend to dementalize animals, that is, they attribute reduced mental capacities (both suffering capacity and cognitive capacity) to animals ( Bastian, Loughnan, Haslam, & Radke, 2012 ). And the lower the perception of suffering capacity of animals is, the less people value the animals ( Caviola et al., 2019 ). A recent study found that in trolley-like scenarios people were more likely to harm robots than humans to save many humans ( Nijssen, Müller, van Baaren, & Paulus, 2019 ). Yet the more human-like the robots were, the less likely people were to harm them, which was explained primarily due to the attribution of affective states. Similarly, in previous work we have shown that the perceived cognitive capacity can play a small though signifi- cant role in explaining the tendency to prioritize humans over animals ( Caviola et al., 2020 ). For example, it seems plausible that people would consider harming animals with a low cognitive capacity (e.g., birds) more permissible than harming animals with a higher cognitive capacity (e.g., apes). Together, these findings suggest that perceived suffering capacity as well as cognitive capacity may play a part in explaining why people are more willing to harm animals than humans. A further, not mutually exclusive possibility is that people are more willing to harm animals than humans simply on the basis of their species-membership alone, regardless of the perceived capac- This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1011 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS ities of the being, that is, speciesism ( Caviola et al., 2019 ;Dhont et al., 2016 ). Indeed, previous research has demonstrated that people have speciesist attitudes. For example, they prioritize hu- mans over animals (in cases of helping) even when perceived suffering capacity is taken into account ( Caviola et al., 2020 ). We also found that speciesism can modulate perceived suffering ca- pacity. That is, the more speciesist people are, the less they perceive animals to be capable of suffering ( Caviola et al., 2019 ), which could in turn reinforce reduced harm aversion for animals. Thus, it is likely that perceived suffering capacity, perceived cognitive capacity, and mere species-membership (speciesism) together contribute to reduced harm aversion for animals. Thus, our hypothesized model of the psychological mecha- nisms, which we refer to as harm aversion mediated speciesism ,is that people see harming animals for the greater good as more permissible than harming humans for the greater good because of a generally weaker aversion to harm animals. Harm aversion, in turn, is multiply determined: it is driven by perceptions of suffer- ing capacity, perceptions of cognitive capacity, and speciesism. Crucially, speciesism reduces harm aversion more for animals than for humans. In short, the model that we will test is a moderated mediation from species condition (humans vs. animals) to harm aversion to degree of moral permissibility (of harming a few to save many of the same species), whereby the effect of condition to harm aversion is moderated by speciesism and where harm aver- sion is also predicted by perceived suffering capacity and per- ceived cognitive capacity. We do not rule out the possibility that there are effects from species (humans vs. animals) onto moral permissibility that do not go via harm aversion (see Figure 1 ). Finally, we make an additional prediction, which we consider less central to the core model but still worth exploring. We hypothesize that speciesism will be associated with reduced per- ceived mental capacities (both suffering capacity and cognitive capacity) in animals but less so in humans. The Present Research In 10 studies we tested the extent to which people accept deontological constraints against harming animals in both intra- and interspecies contexts. And we compared it with the extent to which people accept such constraints for humans. Our first aim was to test whether indeed people’s judgments can best be de- scribed by multilevel weighted deontology. Our second aim was to test the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. We tested this in Studies 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 10. The cognitive capacity factor of the model was only measured and tested in Study 8. In all studies participants were presented with different (usually hypothetical) sacrificial moral dilemmas, which involved harming either animals or humans in order to prevent harm to a larger number of animals or humans and asked for participants’ judgments of the moral permissibility of doing so. Open Science As for all studies in this articles, reports of all measures, ma- nipulations, and exclusions, and all data, analysis code, and ex- perimental materials are available for download at: https://osf.io/ nt69s/ . Studies 1, 2, 5, and 9 were preregistered on the Open Science Framework. Ethics Statement For all studies, relevant ethical guidelines were followed, and the research was approved through University of Oxford’s Central University Research Ethics Committee, with the reference num- bers MS-IDREC-R56657/RE002. Study 1: Humans Versus Animals In Study 1, we tested whether people are more willing to harm a few animals to save many animals (of the same species) than to Figure 1. The harm aversion mediated speciesism model describes the psychological mechanisms underlying judgments about the permissibility of harm to animals and humans. A moderated mediation from species(humans vs. animals) to harm aversion to moral permissibility, whereby the effect of condition to harm aversionis moderated by speciesism and where harm aversion is also predicted by perceived suffering capacity andperceived cognitive capacity. See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1012 CAVIOLA ET AL. harm a few humans to save many humans. Our reasoning was based on the multilevel weighted deontology hypothesis, namely that people’s deontological constraints are weighted by how much they value the respective individual. Because people value humans much more than animals, their deontological constraints should be much higher for humans than for animals, respectively. We tested a range of different animals, namely: panda bears, dogs, squirrels, chimpanzees, and pigs. Dogs and chimpanzees are interesting cases because they both typically are valued less than humans but more than pigs despite the fact that dogs and pigs are similar to each other in terms of level of intelligence or emotional capabilities ( Caviola et al., 2019 ). Chimpanzees are the animal species that are most closely related to humans but still are valued considerably less than humans. Panda bears are interesting because they are often perceived as an especially likable animals. Finally, squirrels are of interest because they are significantly smaller and of lower cognitive capacity than the other animals. Our hypothesis—preregistered at https://osf.io/w863g —was that people would consider it more permissible to harm one animal to save many animals than to harm one human to save many humans. We also assumed that there could be differences between the different types of animals but did not make specific hypothe- ses. To test the harm aversion mediated speciesism model (outlined in the introduction), we measured harm aversion , that is how averse to inflicting harm participants indicated to be for the re- spective beings in question, perceived suffering capacity , that is how much participants believed the respective beings to be capable of suffering when harmed, as well as speciesism (Caviola et al., 2019 ). For exploratory purposes, we also measured empathic con- cern (as part of the Interpersonal Reactivity Index; Davis, 1980 ), instrumental harm , that is permissive attitude toward instrumental harm (OUS-IH), and impartial beneficence , that is impartial con- cern for the greater good (OUS-IB). The latter two measure indi- vidual differences in utilitarian tendencies (Oxford Utilitarianism Scale, Kahane, et al., 2018 ). Due to the exploratory nature of these three measures we will not discuss them further throughout the article. For all studies, correlations between the dependent variable and the follow-up scales for each condition separately are reported in Table S1 in the online supplementary materials. Method Development and pretest of materials. We developed a new moral dilemma that should be perceived as more realistic than the traditional trolley problem ( Bauman, McGraw, Bartels, & Warren, 2014 ). Therefore, in a pretest to Study 1 ( N 700; reported in the online supplementary materials ) we tested five different sacrificial dilemmas. Based on the results we have decided to rely on the vaccine death dilemma in the next studies. In this dilemma the sudden out- break of a rare virus is described, which will kill 100 pigs (or other beings). The only way to save them is to actively infect 10 healthy pigs (that otherwise would not die) to identify the vaccine that can be used to prevent the virus from killing the other 100 pigs. Participants. We recruited 918 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.50 payment for their participation (in line with U.S. minimum wage for all studies). Thirteen participants were excluded for failing at least one of two attention checks, leaving a final sample of 905 people (445 females; Mage 41.31, SD 12.53). We anticipated a small to medium effect of f .13 between animal species based on the results the previous study that relied on abstract dilemmas mentioned above. With an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80, our a priori power analysis showed that we required 768 participants. Hence, we aimed to recruit 900 participants to account for exclusions. Design, materials, and procedure. This study had six between-subjects conditions to which participants were randomly allocated to six conditions: humans, pandas, dogs, squirrels, chimpan- zees, pigs. After participants read the vaccine dilemma, they were asked to indicate how morally right (i.e., permissible) or wrong they thought it to be to harm 10 animals (humans) to save 100 animals (humans) on a 7-point scale from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong )to7 ( absolutely morally right ). From now on this measure will be referred to as “moral permissibility” throughout the article. Next, participants responded to three items each that measured harm aversion ( .94; in all studies, Cronbach alphas are calculated across conditions) and perceived suffering capacity of the respective beings ( .95). A typical harm aversion item was: “How unpleasant would you personally find it to harm the one animal [person]?” with a 9-point response scale ranging from mildly unpleasant to there is nothing else that would be more unpleasant . A typical suffering capacity item was the “How strongly do you think the one animal [person] would suffer if you harm it [him]?” with a 9-point response scale ranging from mild suffering tostrongest imaginable suffering . We then asked participants what the smallest numbers of beings are that would need to be saved to make it permissible to kill the 10 beings (i.e., tipping point). Participants could either respond with a number in a text field or indicate that it is never right. Next, participants completed the Speciesism Scale ( Caviola et al., 2019 ; .88), which measures individual differences in the tendency to assign different moral worth based on species-membership. The scale consists of six items, including “Morally, animals always count for less than humans” and “Humans have the right to use animals however they want to.” Participants then completed the Empathic Concern Scale ( .94) and the two subscales of the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IH .80 and OUS-IB .77). Finally, participants responded to demographic questions. Results A one-way ANOVA revealed that, as predicted, moral permis- sibility differed significantly across species ( Figure 2 ;Table 2 ), F (5, 899) 23.62, p .001, 2 .12. Participants judged harming humans to save many other humans as more morally wrong than doing so for pandas, dogs, squirrels, chimpanzees, and pigs. Similarly, many more participants thought that it was never right to harm 10 humans irrespective of the number of saved humans, whereas a much smaller proportion of participants thought so when it concerned animals (see Table 2 ).Figure 2 shows that deontological constraints differed slightly between the animals conditions. However, these differences were only signif- icant between the panda bears and pigs condition and the dogs and pigs condition (see Table 3 ). Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition and moral permissibility was mediated by harm aversion. The bootstrapped indirect effect was (1.04)( .31) .32, 95% CI [ .43, .22]. Thus, the indirect This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1013 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS effect was statistically significant. We conducted a hierarchical regression to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 4 ). We found that speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion was .16 ( p .05) in the humans condition and .48 ( p .001) in the animals condition (see Table 5 ). In addition, speciesism itself and perceived suffering capacity significantly predicted harm aversion. Thus, our model was confirmed. Table 4 shows the regression results when the humans condition was contrasted with all animals conditions collapsed. We also ran separate regressions where we compared the humans condition with each animals condition separately, controlling for perceived suffering capacity. We found that the speciesism moderation effect was .31 ( p .03) for humans versus pandas, .27 ( p .04) for humans versus dogs, .34 ( p .005) for humans versus squirrels, .42 ( p .001) for humans versus chimpanzees, and .53 ( p .001) for humans versus pigs. This suggests that the speciesism moder- ation effect was stronger for those animals that participants grant weaker deontological constraints to. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between spe- ciesism and suffering capacity was stronger in the animals Figure 2. Moral permissibility of harming 10 individuals of a species to saving 100 of the same species, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), to 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ). For all figures, black points represent raw data, horizontal bars represent means, rectangles represent confidence intervals, and “beans”represent smoothed densities (Study 1). See the online article for the color version of this figure. Table 2 Descriptive Statistics of Moral Permissibility and Scales (Study 1) Species Moral permissibility Never right Tipping point Harm aversion Suffering capacity Humans 2.85 (1.84) 65% 100 7.79 (1.53) 7.91 (1.21) Pandas 4.33 (1.81) 34% 50 7.14 (1.83) 7.33 (1.49)Dogs 4.35 (1.88) 36% 50 7.38 (1.43) 7.04 (1.77)Squirrels 4.56 (1.78) 39% 50 6.42 (2.07) 7.01 (1.86)Chimpanzees 4.35 (1.88) 30% 45 6.70 (2.11) 7.20 (1.71)Pigs 4.85 (1.69) 25% 50 6.11 (2.08) 6.79 (1.80) Note. Never right stands for the proportion of participants who thought that it was never right to harm ten individuals of a certain species irrespective of the number of saved individuals of the same species. Tipping pointstands for the number of individuals that have to be saved in order to justify harming ten individuals of the samespecies (median response). This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1014 CAVIOLA ET AL. conditions, r .40, p .001 than in the humans condition, r .24, p .003. Speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition (humans vs. animals) onto suffering capacity ( .22, p .003). Discussion The results of Study 1 demonstrate that people consider it significantly more wrong to harm a few humans to save many than to harm a few animals to save many irrespective of the type of animal—whether they are panda bears, dogs, squirrels, chimpan- zees, or pigs. This suggests that people have weaker deontological constraints for animals than for humans and are therefore more likely to be willing to sacrifice some for the greater good when confronted with animals than with humans. The results supported the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. It was, however, not the case that people considered it com- pletely permissible to harm animals to save many, which is what “Utilitarianism for animals, Kantianism for people” would sug- gest, nor was the strength of the constraint constant across the scenarios. The results therefore support the multilevel weighted deontology hypothesis on which deontological constraints still limit the permissibility of harm to animals, but in a weaker way than in the human case. Note that Figure 2 reveals that, while there were large individual differences in responses, only a small mi- nority exhibited no deontological constraint at all against harm for animals, which is what Nozick’s slogan would predict. We also found that there are differences in deontological con- straints people grant to different types of animal species. For example, people hold stronger deontological constraints against harming dogs (a typical pet) than pigs (a typical food animal). The results of this study are in line with the results of two additional versions of this study we conducted, reported in the online sup- plementary materials , in which we only included humans, dogs, pigs, and chimpanzees. The fact that deontological constraints differ (even if only to a small degree) across different animal species is inconsistent not only with Nozick’s slogan, but also with the multilevel uniform deontology view. By contrast, these find- ings fit well with the multilevel weighted deontology view, ac- cording to which deontological constraints get weighted differ- ently depending on how much people value the respective species. Study 2: Personal Versus Impersonal Sacrificial Dilemmas In Study 2, we tested whether the effect we found in Study 1—namely that people have weaker deontological constraints for animals than for humans—would replicate when relying on the traditional trolley problem. In a previous study, which is reported in the online supplemen- tary materials , we conducted such a study involving pigs and found that participants had weaker deontological constraints for pigs than for humans. In this study, by contrast, we included zebras, an animal that people do not classify as food but rather want to save from extinction (cf. Schubert, Caviola, & Faber, 2019 ). Our hy- pothesis—preregistered at https://osf.io/xsbr8 —was that partici- pants would find it more permissible to harm one zebra in order to save five zebras than to harm one human to save many humans. According to the dual-process model of moral judgment ( Greene, 2014 ) an automatic and intuitive aversion to harm pre- vents more deliberate utilitarian cost-benefit analysis. Previous research has shown that in more personal moral dilemmas that involve direct actions (e.g., pushing a person off the bridge) the aversion to harm is more emotional and stronger compared with impersonal moral dilemmas that involve indirect actions (e.g., pushing a button; cf. Greene, 2014 ). Therefore, one possible con- clusion is that harming individuals with lower perceived moral status, such as animals, is less personal and emotionally evocative, resulting in a weaker aversion to harm such individuals. We, therefore, looked at both personal sacrificial moral dilem- mas (footbridge/push) and impersonal sacrificial moral dilemmas (sidetrack/switch). We intended to test whether deontological con- straints for animals are similarly reduced in an impersonal di- lemma and in a personal dilemma. Based on the findings of our previous study, we hypothesized that there would be no interaction effect between the type of dilemma and the species-manipulation. Method Participants. We recruited 404 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.50 payment for their participation. Four participants were excluded for either failing to complete the questionnaire or for failing an attention check, leaving a final sample of 400 people (194 females; Mage 38.36, SD 11.51). We aimed for a sample size of 400 participants, as our a priori power analysis showed that 351 participants were required to detect a medium effect size of f .15, with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80. Design, materials, and procedure. Our study ha da2di- lemma (impersonal vs. personal) 2 species (humans vs. zebras) between-subjects factorial design. Participants were randomly al- located to read one of four variants of a moral dilemma modeled after the traditional trolley problem. As a personal dilemma the Table 4 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 1) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .24 .34 Condition .10 .09 Speciesism .49 .35 Speciesism Condition .33 .25 Suffering .35 Note. Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for all animals conditions. p .001. Table 3 Effect Sizes (Cohen’s d) for Moral Permissibility Comparisons Across Conditions (Study 1) Condition Humans Pandas Dogs Squirrels Chimpanzees Pandas .81 Dogs .81 .01 Squirrels .94 .13 .11 Chimpanzees .96 .15 .14 .03 Pigs 1.13 .30 .28 .17 .14 p .05. p .01. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1015 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS footbridge trolley case was used and as an impersonal the sidetrack trolley case was used. After reading the dilemmas, participants responded to the same scales as in Study 1: harm aversion ( .95), perceived suffering capacity ( .93), Speciesism Scale ( .88), Empathic Concern Scale ( .94), and the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IH .80; OUS-IB .79). Finally, participants responded to demographic questions. Results A2 2 between-subjects ANOVA revealed two main effects but no interaction. Participants considered harming one zebra to save five zebras to be more permissible (impersonal: M 5.03, SD 1.66; personal: M 3.95, SD 1.93) than harming one human to save five humans (impersonal: M 4.19, SD 1.79; personal: M 2.86, SD 2.02), F(1, 396) 28.08, p .001, p 2 .06. Participants also considered harming in an impersonal dilemma (i.e., via flipping a switch) to be more permissible than in a personal dilemma (i.e., via pushing off the footbridge), F(1, 396) 41.70, p .001, p 2 .10. However, there was no interaction effect between species and dilemma, F(1, 396) 0.42, p .52, p 2 .001 (see Figure 3 ). This means that the difference in moral permissibility between zebras and humans was roughly Table 5 Correlations Between Measures (Study 1) Factor Permissibility Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering EC OUS-IB OUS-IH Speciesism .35 Harm aversion .36 .43 Suffering .30 .37 .49 EC .16 .35 .32 .26 OUS-IB .02 .27 .18 .13 .37 OUS-IH .42 .33 .19 .16 .29 .09 Condition .33 .01 .20 .18 .01 .02 .03 Note. EC empathic concern; OUS-IB impartial beneficence; OUS-IH instrumental harm. Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for all animals conditions. p .01. p .001. Figure 3. Moral permissibility of harming one individual to saving five individuals of the same species, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), to 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ) (Study 2). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1016 CAVIOLA ET AL. the same in both the impersonal, d .49, p .008 (Tukey’s HSD), and the personal dilemma, d .60, p .001. Similarly, the difference in moral permissibility between the impersonal and personal dilemmas was roughly the same both for zebras, d .49, p .008, and humans, d .69, p .001. Participants were less harm averse for zebras (impersonal: M 6.61, SD 1.66; personal: M 6.98, SD 1.77) than for humans (impersonal: M 7.63, SD 1.64; personal: M 7.82, SD 1.59), F(1, 396) 31.23, p .001, p 2 .07. Harm aversion was not statistically significantly stronger in personal compared to impersonal dilemmas, F(1, 396) 2.75, p .10, p 2 .007. There was also no interaction effect, F(1, 396) 0.31, p .58, p 2 .001. Further, participants perceived zebras (impersonal: M 7.66, SD 1.41; personal: M 7.86, SD 1.54) to suffer less than humans (impersonal: M 8.11, SD 1.42; personal: M 8.28, SD 1.48), F(1, 396) 1.62, p .20, p 2 .02. Suffering capacity did not differ across the two dilemma types, F(1, 396) 2.75, p .10, p 2 .004. There was also no interaction effect, F(1, 396) 0.009, p .92, p 2 .001. Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition and moral permissibility was mediated by harm aversion. The bootstrapped indirect effect was (.93)( .31) .29, 95% CI [ .44, .16]. Thus, the indirect effect was statistically significant. We conducted a hierarchical regression to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 6 ). We found that speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion was .18 ( p .01) in the humans condition and .43 ( p .001) in the zebras condition (see Table 7 ). In addition, perceived suffering capacity significantly predicted harm aversion. Thus, our model was confirmed. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between specie- sism and suffering capacity was stronger in the zebras condition, r .28, p .001 than in the humans condition, r .15, p .04. Despite this, speciesism did not significantly moderate the effect of condition onto suffering capacity ( .18, p .14). Discussion Results from Study 2 confirm our main hypothesis that people consider it more permissible to harm one zebra to save five zebras than to harm one human to save five humans. It provides further support that people’s deontological constraints for animals are weaker than for humans. The results supported the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The reduction in deontological constraints for animals com- pared with humans was similarly strong in both personal and impersonal dilemmas. This is consistent with the findings of a previous study we conducted including pigs, which is reported in the online supplementary materials . In previous research it has been argued that the difference in responses between per- sonal and impersonal sacrificial dilemmas is the result of a greater emotional reaction in the personal case ( Greene, 2014 ). If so, the lack of interaction could suggest that the mode via which one harms a few to save many (i.e., personal vs. imper- sonal) and whether the beings at stake are animals or humans are processed independently and make independent contribu- tions to the overall judgment. Study 3: Process Dissociation In Study 3, we aimed to more directly test our hypothesis that the deontological aversion to harm animals is weaker than the deontological aversion to harm humans. A limitation of conven- tional sacrificial moral dilemmas is that they do not allow to clearly distinguish between the deontological aversion to harm the few and the utilitarian desire to help the many. In conventional sacrificial dilemmas these two factors are conflated because the deontological and utilitarian reasons are pitted against each other and result in a single moral judgment. In this study, we systemat- ically teased apart the two psychological tendencies, namely the purely utilitarian inclination (i.e., tendency to maximize positive outcomes factoring out the deontological inclination to reject harm) from the purely deontological inclination (i.e., tendency to reject harm factoring out the utilitarian inclination to maximize the positive outcomes). We did this by relying on the so-called process dissociation technique, originally developed by Jacoby (1991) for the study of memory processes and more recently by Conway and Gawronski (2013) to sacrificial moral dilemmas. We hypothesized that in particular deontological inclinations would be reduced for animals compared with humans. This is because according to multilevel weighted deontology, deontologi- cal constraints get reduced for individuals that people morally value less. In contrast, according to multilevel uniform deontology, utilitarianism, cross species deontology there should be no differ- ence in the deontological inclination toward humans and animals. In our previous studies, we found evidence for that based on our harm aversion scales. We further hypothesized that utilitarian inclinations would be affected less by the species-membership of the individuals because we assumed that—all else equal and with- out any costs or counteracting harm aversion—people would have a similar desire to help many people as to help many animals. We also hypothesized that the more speciesist participants were, the lower their deontological inclinations for animals but not for humans would be. Method Participants. We recruited 124 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.85 payment for their participation. Eleven participants were excluded for failing at least one attention check, leaving a final sample of 113 people (45 females; Mage 38.19, SD 10.93). We aimed for a sample size of 110 partici- pants, as our a priori power analysis showed that 110 participants Table 6 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 2) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .17 .34 Condition .02 .01 Speciesism .43 .30 Speciesism Condition .34 .26 Suffering .43 Note. Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for the zebra condition. p .05. p .01. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1017 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS were required to detect a medium effect size of f .2, with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80, and correction among repeated measures of 0.1 (similar to Muda, Niszczota, Bia ek, & Conway, 2018 ). Design, materials, and procedure. The study had two con- ditions (humans vs. pigs). Participants were presented with 10 dilemmas in randomized order involving either pigs or humans. Half of the dilemmas were so-called incongruent dilemmas and half were so-called congruent dilemmas. In the incongruent dilem- mas, deontology and utilitarianism prescribe diverging responses, as in the classic footbridge problem (e.g., kill one to save five). In the congruent dilemmas, deontology and utilitarianism prescribe the same responses (e.g., kill five to save one). In order to avoid floor effects in the congruent dilemmas, there were selfish reasons to choose the harmful option (e.g., winning money). The dilemmas can be found in the online supplementary materials . Participants responded to each dilemma on a 7-point scale, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong )to7( absolutely morally right ). Re- sponses to the congruent cases ( .87) and incongruent cases ( .89) were aggregated from the single dilemmas. Participants were then presented with questions about the per- ceived suffering capacity of the respective beings ( .97) and their aversion to harm them ( .94). The questions were similar to the ones asked in the previous studies. Finally, participants responded to the Speciesism Scale ( .92), the Empathic Con- cern Scale ( .95), the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IH .82; OUS-IB .81), and demographic questions. Results In the incongruent dilemmas, moral permissibility was higher for pigs ( M 4.74, SD 1.52) than for humans ( M 3.13, SD 1.32), t(110) 6.02, p .001, d 1.13. This replicates our core finding from the previous studies that people consider it more permissible to harm a few animals to save more animals than they consider it to harm a few humans to save more humans. In the congruent dilemmas, moral permissibility was also higher for pigs ( M 2.73, SD 1.41) than for humans ( M 1.66, SD 0.79), t (92) 4.78, p .001, d .92. To compute the utilitarian and deontological parameters, we first transformed the aggregated responses on the 7-point scale into probabilities, indicating the chance that a participant would con- sider the act immoral (1 100%, 4 50%, 7 0%). Next, we followed the formula by Conway and Gawronski’s (2013) to calculate the two parameters: utilitarian parameter p(immoral | congruent) p(immoral | incongruent); deontological parame- ter p(immoral | incongruent)/(1 utilitarian parameter). We standardized the parameters using a ztransformation. We then conducte d a 2 (parameter: utilitarian vs. deontologi- cal) 2 (species: humans vs. pigs) repeated measures mixed- model ANOVA where the parameter factor was treated within- subjects and the species factor was treated between-subjects. The results revealed a main effect of species-membership, F(1, 222) 5.33, p .02, p 2 .02, and an interaction effect, F(1, 222) 33.86, p .001, p 2 .13 (see Figure 4 ). Tukey’s HSD post hoc tests revealed that deontological inclinations were stronger for humans ( M 0.52, SD 0.65) than for pigs ( M 0.48, SD 1.03), p .002, d 1.15. The difference in utilitarian inclinations between humans ( M 0.23, SD 0.86) and pigs ( M 0.21, SD 1.08) was not statistically significant, p .07, d .44. However, there was a trend, suggesting that the utilitarian incli- nation for pigs were descriptively stronger than for humans. Next, we looked at correlations across conditions for the utili- tarianism and deontology parameter separately (see Table 8 ). In both conditions, harm aversion correlated with the deontological inclination but not with the utilitarian inclination. Perceived suf- fering capacity correlated with the deontological inclination for pigs but nor for humans. Perceived suffering capacity also did not correlate with the utilitarian inclination in either condition. As hypothesized, the more speciesist participants were, the weaker their deontological inclination for pigs. Speciesism, however, did not correlate with the deontological inclination for humans. Spe- ciesism also did not correlate with the utilitarian inclination in either condition. Across conditions, the utilitarian inclination cor- related negatively with the deontological inclination, r(111) .19, p .046. Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition (humans vs. pigs) and moral permissibility (in the incongruent dilemmas) was mediated by harm aversion. The bootstrapped indirect effect was (1.51)( .20) .30, 95% CI [ .64, .09]. Thus, the indirect effect was statistically significant. We conducted a hierarchical regression to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 9 ). We found that speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion was .13 ( p .10) in the humans condition and .57 ( p .001) in the pigs condition (see Table 7 Correlations Between Measures (Study 2) Factor Permissibility Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering EC OUS-IB OUS-IH Speciesism .18 Harm aversion .31 .30 Suffering .24 .22 .51 EC .09† .36 .37 .26 OUS-IB .16 .28 .19 .11 .47 OUS-IH .45 .25 .26 .18 .15 .15 Condition .25 .01 .27 .15 .05 .08 .02 Note. EC empathic concern; OUS-IB impartial beneficence; OUS-IH instrumental harm. Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for the zebras condition.†p .10. p .05. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1018 CAVIOLA ET AL. Table 10 ). In addition, perceived suffering capacity significantly predicted harm aversion. Thus, our model was confirmed. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between specie- sism and suffering capacity was .25 ( p .06) in the humans condition and .55 ( p .001) in the pigs condition. However, speciesism did not significantly moderate the effect of condition (humans vs. pigs) onto perceived suffering capacity ( .32, p .12). Discussion In Study 3, we systematically teased apart the utilitarian and deontological inclinations, which are conflated in conventional sacrificial dilemma analysis that we have relied on in the other studies. The results show that the deontological inclination is much stronger for humans than for pigs. The utilitarian inclination, by contrast, showed a descriptive trend for being stronger for pigs than for humans. Deontological inclination for pigs was weaker, the lower their perceived suffering capacity and the more specie- sist participants were. Perceived suffering capacity also correlated Figure 4. Standardized utilitarianism and deontology parameters for humans and pigs, respectively (z- transformed). Participants had stronger deontological inclinations (i.e., harm-rejection) for humans than for pigs,but they had somewhat stronger utilitarian inclinations (i.e., outcome-maximization) for pigs than humans. Notethat the zero point is not meaningful due to ztransformation and that a direct comparison between the deontological and utilitarian parameter is not possible (Study 3). See the online article for the color version ofthis figure. Table 8 Correlations With the Utilitarian and Deontological Inclination for Each Condition Separately (Study 3) Condition Humans Pigs Inclination Utilitarian Deontological Utilitarian Deontological Harm aversion .04 .33 .06 .43 Suffering capacity .06 .06 .06 .33 Speciesism .03 .17 .08 .65 Empathic concern .02 .23 † .03 .13 OUS-IB .01 .19 .26 .01 OUS-IH .44 .52 .14 .58 Note . OUS-IB impartial beneficence; OUS-IH instrumental harm. †p .10. p .05. p .001. Table 9 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 3) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .31 .40 Condition .02 .08 Speciesism .56 .38 Speciesism Condition .47 .35† Suffering .33 Note. Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for the pigs condition.†p .10. p .05. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1019 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS with deontological inclination for humans. Speciesism, however, did not correlate with deontological inclinations for humans. Nei- ther perceived suffering capacity nor speciesism correlated with utilitarian inclinations. The results again supported the harm aver- sion speciesism model. The finding that people had a slightly stronger utilitarian incli- nation for pigs than humans was somewhat surprising as one would expect people to have a similar desire to save as many humans as possible as to save as many animals as possible. One possibility is that this result is related to another finding we report below (see Study 5), where we found that people were less likely to agree that one human is less valuable than two humans than they were to agree that one animal is less valuable than two animals. In other words, people may be less willing to maximize helping as many humans as possible than they are willing to maximize helping as many animals as possible (even when there is no counteracting deontological constraint) because they consider it less permissible to quantify and compare the lives of humans than the lives of animals. In sum, the findings of this study suggest that the fact that people are more willing to harm a few animals to save more animals than to harm a few humans to save more humans is primarily driven by a weaker deontological inclination for animals than humans. And we found that this reduced deontological incli- nations for animals is at least partly driven by both perceived suffering capacity and speciesism. This is again in line with our multilevel weighted deontology hypothesis: As deontological con- straints get weaker, the less people value the individuals; people value animals less than humans, and thus hold weaker deontologi- cal constraints for them. Study 4: Cross-Species Sacrifices So far, the individuals that could be saved were of the same species as those that had to be harmed. This means that the perceived moral status of the individuals that have to be harmed and those that can be saved was kept constant. In Study 4, we aim to manipulate the relative value of the costs and benefits. We do this by examining cross-species sacrifices, that is, cases when the species-membership of the harmed and the saved individuals dif- fers. According to the multilevel weighted deontology model, deontological constraints are weaker the lower the moral status of the individual that has to be harmed. Further, the weaker the deontological constraints, the stronger the comparative weight of the moral reasons to save the greater number. From this, we draw the following hypotheses: First, we would expect people to generally consider it more permissible to harm animals than humans irrespective of whether many animals or humans can be saved. This is because in both cases deontological constraints against harming animals are weaker, which makes it more likely for the utilitarian cost-benefit analysis to overrule them. However, because humans have higher moral status than animals, deontological constraints might be even easier to overturn if humans compared with animals can be saved. Second, because deontological constraints against harming hu- mans are strong, people will in general consider it fairly wrong to harm humans to save either humans or animals. However, to the extent that people overcome their deontological constraints and do engage in cost-benefit analyses, these will yield opposing recom- mendations. Cost-benefit analysis will recommend harming the human to save many humans but advise against harming a human to save many animals. This is because most people consider one human death to be much worse than five pig deaths. We therefore expect an interaction effect such that the difference in moral permissibility is greater if humans have to be harmed than if animals have to be harmed. Method Participants. We recruited 150 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.90 payment for their participation. Eight participants were excluded for failing at least one of two attention checks, leaving a final sample of 142 people (66 females; Mage 38.60, SD 11.66). We anticipated a small to medium effect of f .13 between animal species based on the results of Study 1. With an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80, our a priori power analysis showed that we required 120 participants for a within-subjects study. To account for exclusions, we recruited 150 participants. Design, materials, and procedure. This study ha d a 2 harm (pigs vs. humans) 2 save (pigs vs. humans) design. Note that in contrast to the previous studies, this study was conducted com- pletely within-subjects to test whether the effect also holds in this set-up. We chose an abstract sacrificial dilemma because its briefness was well suited for this within-subjects design and because we Table 10 Correlations Between Measures (Study 3) Factor z-util z-deont Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering EC OUS-IB OUS-IH z-deont .19† Speciesism .11 .36 Harm aversion .03 .50 .40 Suffering .02 .18 .42 .45 EC .01 .15 .18 † .49 .34 OUS-IB .16 † .10 .23 .20 .30 .29 OUS-IH .27 .52 .34 .26 .16† .15 .24 Condition .22 .50 .01 .36 .03 .01 .07 .09 Note. EC empathic concern; OUS-IB impartial beneficence; OUS-IH instrumental harm. z-util and z-deont are the standardized utilitarianism and deontology parameters. Condition was coded as 1 for the humans condition and as 0 for the pigs condition.†p .10. p .05. p .01. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1020 CAVIOLA ET AL. expected large effects. Participants were asked to consider the following: “Suppose you are in a situation in which you have to decide whether to kill 10 individuals to save 100 individuals. If you do nothing, the 100 individuals will die. How morally right or wrong is it to . . . 1) kill 10 humans to save 100 pigs, 2) kill 10 humans to save 100 humans, 3) kill 10 pigs to save 100 pigs, 4) kill 10 pigs to save 100 humans?” Participants responded to these four questions first on a 7-point moral permissibility scale ranging from 1( absolutely morally wrong )to7( absolutely morally right ), and on the next page on a binary response measure ( wrong vs. right ). On the next pages, we included two new questions on moral acceptability and moral requiredness for all four conditions each to test whether they would yield different patterns. Next, we included an question, asking what minimum number of individuals would need to be saved in order to justify harming 10 (similar to the tipping point question in Study 1). Furthermore, we included a question asking what maximum number of individuals could be harmed in order for it still to be justified to save the 100. Partic- ipants then completed the Speciesism Scale ( .84), the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IB .83; OUS-IH .71), and responded to demographic questions. Results A two-way repeated-measures ANOVA revealed two main ef- fects and an interaction. Participants generally considered it more permissible to harm pigs than humans, F(1, 142) 461.72, p .001, p 2 .38, and generally considered it more permissible to harm an individual if humans could be saved than if pigs could be saved F(1, 142) 179.63, p .001, p 2 .19. When humans had to be harmed, participants considered this much more permissible if this had to be done in order to save other humans ( M 4.12, SD 1.70) than if it had to be done in order to save pigs ( M 1.83, SD 1.36), p .001, d 1.50. But, in contrast, when pigs had to be harmed, participants considered this only very slightly more permissible if this had to be done in order to save humans ( M 5.78, SD 1.54) than if it had to be done in order to save pigs ( M 5.04, SD 1.68), p .001, d .47. When humans could be saved, participants considered it more permissible to do so by harming pigs than by harming humans, p .001, d 1.03. But when pigs could be saved, participants considered it even much more permissible to do so by harming pigs than by harming humans, p .001, d 2.10. In short, there was a significant interaction in moral permissibility based on species harmed and species saved (see Figure 5 ),F(1, 142) 46.38, p .001, p 2 .06. Results for the moral acceptability and moral requiredness questions were in line with the main dependent variable (see online supplementary materials ). The same pattern was found for the binary morally right/wrong question: Only 4.2% considered it right to harm humans to save many pigs, but 51.4% considered it right to harm humans to save many humans. On the other hand, 80.3% considered it right to harm pigs to save many pigs, and 85.9% considered it right to Figure 5. Moral permissibility of harming 10 individuals of a species to saving 100 of either the same or a different species, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), to 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ) (Study 4). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1021 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS harm pigs to save many humans; 83.8% participants said it would always be wrong to kill humans, no matter the number of saved pigs; 46.5% said it would always be wrong to kill humans, no matter the number of saved humans. In contrast, only 14.8% said it would always be wrong to kill pigs no matter the number of saved humans. And 18.3% said it would always be wrong to kill pigs no matter the number of saved pigs. Discussion The results of this study confirm our hypothesis. People gener- ally consider it to be permissible to harm animals irrespective of who will be saved—with only minor differences in moral permis- sibility depending on whether humans or animals would be saved. At the same time, however, people consider it impermissible to harm humans for animals, but less so if humans can be saved. Harming humans to save more humans—as in the traditional footbridge case—remains controversial among participants. Therefore, as we predicted, the difference in how permissible people consider it to harm humans if either humans or animals can be saved is much greater than the difference in how moral people consider it to harm animals if either humans or animals can be saved. Our explanation is that deontological constraints against harming animals are more easily overruled by utilitarian cost-benefit analysis than deontological constraints against harming humans. Further, in the case where humans have to be harmed to save many animals perhaps even cost-benefit anal- ysis advises against the harmful action if people believe that 10 humans have far more value than 100 animals. A limitation of this study was that it may not have been entirely clear to participants from the short abstract dilemmas whether the individuals that had to be killed would have died anyway. In all other studies we present in this article, it was made clear that the individuals that have to be killed would not have died otherwise. Study 5: Between Objects and Humans Our previous studies demonstrated that people are more willing to harm a few animals to save many than to harm a few humans to save many. Does this mean that people see animals just as objects that can be sacrificed for any reason? In Study 5, we aimed to compare the extent to which people hold deontological constraints for humans, animals, and objects. In particular, our research ques- tion is whether moral permissibility of harming a few animals for many is closer to those of harming a few humans to save many or those of harming (or destroying) a few objects to save many. Nozick (1974) hypothesized that people view animals as be- longing into a moral category between humans and objects. On the one hand, Nozick reasoned, in some ways we treat animals like objects. We consider it permissible to own animals or to harm them for the greater good—something most people now consider to be wrong if it involved humans. On the other hand, because animals can suffer, there are many things we are not allowed to do with animals that we are allowed to do with objects. For example, while it may be permissible to harm animals for the greater good, it is generally not permissible to unnecessarily harm animals for weaker reasons such as for pure personal pleasure. With objects, however, people appear to mostly consider it permissible to do with them whatever one wants as long as nobody gets hurt or nobody’s property rights are violated. A study by Nichols and Mallon (2006) , however, suggested that people apply very weak deontological constraints even to objects. They reported that peo- ple apply deontological constraints even to inanimate objects, albeit very weakly: While people did not consider it overall wrong to destroy one object to prevent several objects from being de- stroyed in a footbridge-like scenario, they did agree that a moral rule was broken in such a case. Our hypothesis, which we preregistered at https://osf.io/aeu3g /, was that people’s views about the moral permissibility of harming animals lie somewhere between their views about the moral per- missibility of harming (or destroying) humans and objects. This is because, according to the multilevel weighted deontology model, we hypothesize that people have extremely weak deontological constraints for objects, somewhat weak constraints for animals and strong constraints for humans. The philosopher Martha Nussbaum (1995) has identified a num- ber of dimensions of objectification, such as ownership, instru- mentality, denial of autonomy, or fungibility (interchangeability). Based on this, we hypothesized these are applied to objects as well as, to some extent, to animals. People are likely to agree that objects are interchangeable, that is, that one could easily replace one chair or toothbrush by another if they are similar and that they can be owned. The same does not apply to humans since every human is seen as being unique, whereas animals might be in a moral category in between humans and objects. Similarly, people are likely to agree that one object is less valuable than two. In contrast, people are often unwilling to agree that one human is less valuable than two. Again, we hypothesize that animals are in an intermediate moral position. Overall, we expect that moral permis- sibility of harming a few to save many might track views on interchangeability and comparability of these objects. This is be- cause harming a few to save many is only a permissible option if one believes that the respective entities are in principle inter- changeable and the two options comparable. Method Participants. We recruited 603 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.72 payment for their participation. Forty-six were excluded for failing at least one attention check, leaving a final sample of 557 people (299 females; Mage 38.39, SD 11.77). We expected a small to medium effect size. Our analysis showed that 576 participants were required to detect an effect size of f .13 with an alpha of 0.05, power of 0.80, and three groups. We aimed to recruit 600 participants to account for any exclusions. Design, materials, and procedure. This study had a between-subjects design with three conditions: humans, ani- mals, and objects. Each participant received two vignettes in random order. The reason we chose two was because we knew from Study 1 that there can be differences between different types of animals. Similarly, we believed that there could be small differences between high and low value objects (cf. Nichols & Mallon, 2006 ). The two vignettes participants re- ceived involved adults and children in the humans condition, dogs and pigs in the animals condition, and paintings and chairs in the objects condition. We were primarily interested in the average effects, which is why we aimed to take the mean of the This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1022 CAVIOLA ET AL. responses to the two vignettes in each condition as the main dependent variable. The vignettes were based on our vaccine dilemma from the previous studies but were slightly adapted to ensure plausibility and consistency across the three conditions. Similar to the vaccine dilemma we used in Study 1, in each dilemma the entities that had to be harmed (or destroyed) were of the same type as the entities that could be saved (e.g., destroy 10 paintings to prevent 100 paintings from getting destroyed). After completing the main task, which involved indicating their moral permissibility ratings about harming a few to pre- vent similar harm to many in two separate vignettes, partici- pants were presented with short additional questions. First, participants were asked whether they consider it morally ac- ceptable to kill a pig or a human/destroy a chair if one has a strong personal preference to do so. Second, they were asked whether they consider it acceptable to own a chair, pig or human (cf. Starmans & Friedman, 2016 ). Third, they were asked whether they think a chair, pig or human can easily be replaced by another one (interchangeability). Fourth, they were asked whether they believe one chair, pig, or human is less valuable than two (comparability). Next, participants were ex- plicitly asked to indicate on a slider what moral value they attribute to animals relative to objects ( 50) and humans ( 50). Finally, participants completed the Speciesism Scale ( .86), the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IB .79; OUS-IH .76), and responded to demographic questions. Results Within each condition, moral permissibility of the two vignettes correlated strongly with each other (humans: r(187) 0.95, p .001; animals: r(189) .87, p .001; objects: r(175) .74, p .001). Therefore, the responses of the two vignettes in each con- dition were averaged to form a single score. Further analysis revealed that if the two vignettes were analyzed separately, the overall pattern of the results remained the same. The following analyses are based on the aggregated scores only. A one-way ANOVA revealed that there were significant differ- ences across the three conditions in moral permissibility, F(2, 554) 105.67, p .001, p 2 .28 ( Figure 6 ;Table 11 ). And as in our previous studies, participants considered it more permissible to harm a few animals to save many animals ( M 4.70, SD 1.66) than to harm a few humans to save ( M 3.28, SD 2.00), p .001, d .78. Participants considered it more permissible to destroy a few objects in order to prevent more objects from being destroyed ( M 5.83, SD 1.28) than to harm a few animals to save more animals, p .001, d .75. Accordingly, the difference in moral permissibility between the objects and humans condition was very large, p .001, d 1.51. Next, we looked at the other dependent measures. For all four questions we found the same pattern, with animals being in a category between humans and objects (see Table 11 ). First, par- ticipants thought it was permissible to destroy a chair if one has a Figure 6. Moral permissibility of harming (or destroying) 10 humans, animals, or objects to save 100 of the same type, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), to 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ) (Study 5). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1023 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS strong preference to do so, but it was somewhat wrong to harm a pig if one has a strong preference to do so, and very wrong to harm a human if one has a strong preference to do so. Second, partici- pants thought it was permissible to own a chair, as well as a pig— even though somewhat less— but they thought it was wrong to own a human. Third, they thought that a chair could easily be replaced by another one, whereas a human could not be replaced by another human. For pigs, they thought it was somewhat possi- ble to replace a pig with another one. Fourth, participants agreed that one chair was less valuable than two, slightly agreed that one pig was less valuable than two, but strongly disagreed that one human was less valuable than two. When asked explicitly what the moral value of animals relative to humans and objects were, participants stated that they consider animals to be closer to humans with a mean of 23.68 ( SD 23.54) on a scale from 50 (objects) to 50 (humans), which was significantly above the midpoint 0, t(556) 23.74, p .001, d 1.01. Discussion This study showed that people place animals into a moral category between objects and humans. People have very strong deontological constraints for humans, relatively weak ones for animals, and extremely weak ones, at best, for objects. These findings support the multilevel weighted deontology model. They suggest that there is a hierarchy of moral levels, and that deonto- logical constraints do not disappear as we move down the levels but just get weaker. It is noteworthy that while the modal response in the objects condition was 7 (i.e., no deontological constraints at all), a considerate number of participants (155 out of 177) chose values below 7. And while this could be partly be explained by noise, it is also possible that some people still hold weak deonto- logical constraints for objects. Similar patterns were found on views about harming for idio- syncratic reasons, ownership, interchangeability, and comparabil- ity. Participants considered it wrong to own humans, but morally acceptable to own animals and objects. They considered it very wrong to harm humans to fulfil a personal preference, fairly wrong to harm animals to fulfil a personal preference but morally accept- able to harm objects to fulfil a personal preference. Furthermore, we found that deontological constraints against harming for the greater good may be related with— or even underpinned by— views on interchangeability and comparability of the respective entities. Participants disagreed that humans can easily be ex- changed by other humans or that one human life is less valuable than two. At the same time, they had strikingly different views about objects: they believed that objects can easily be replaced by other objects and that one object is clearly less valuable than two objects. Again, animals were placed in an intermediate position with regard to these two aspects. Thus, our results suggest that only if one believes that an entity can be compared with and replaced by other similar entities, is it seen as sensible to harm one such entity to save many. Study 6: Time Investment and Donations The previous studies focused on judgments in hypothetical scenarios and were presented to online samples on MTurk. In Study 6, we aimed to replicate the effect with an offline student sample with two goals: first, to show that the effect shows in the real-world context of medical experimentation; second, to show that the hypothetical judgments we studied so far translate into concrete behavior. In the real world, harming animals to benefit others is common in the context of medical experimentation. The general societal consensus is that medical experimentation on animals, even if harmful, is justified whereas on humans it is not—in particular if no consent is given by the humans. In this study, we asked students on the University of Oxford campus about their opinion on the ethical permissibility of medical experiments on pigs or human infants. In addition to measuring their opinions in the form of judgments, we also aimed to measure behavior. For that, we gave them the possibility to invest their personal time to help improve the campaign of an activist organi- zation that was fighting against the proposed medical research program on pigs or infants. Furthermore, participants had the option of donating personal money to support the activist organi- zation if they wished to do so. Our hypothesis was that we would replicate the effect found in the previous studies for the judgment as well as behavioral measures. Method Participants. We recruited 208 students on the campus of the University of Oxford who received £3 payment (in line with United Kingdom minimum wage) for their participation. Eight were excluded because they did not complete an attention check or did not finish the study, leaving a final sample of 200 people (118 females; Mage 24.31, SD 7.68). Power analysis showed that 197 participants were required to detect an effect size of f .2, which we determined in an online pilot study, with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80. We aimed to recruit 200 participants to account for any exclusions. Design, materials, and procedure. The study had two between-subjects conditions. Participants first read a text about a Table 11 Descriptive Statistics of Moral Permissibility and Scales (Study 5) Measure Humans Animals Objects Harming a few to save many 3.28 (2.00) 4.70 (1.66) 5.83 (1.28) Harming for personal preference 1.56 (1.23) 3.16 (1.72) 4.95 (1.53)Owning 1.43 (1.07) 5.76 (1.24) 6.47 (0.9)Replacing with another (interchangeability) 1.75 (1.19) 4.46 (1.7) 5.98 (1.03)One less valuable than two (comparability) 2.35 (1.66) 4.48 (1.83) 5.36 (1.60) Note. M (SD) ratings on a scale from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong )to7( absolutely morally right ) for the first row and from 1 ( strongly disagree ) to 7 (strongly agree) for the remaining rows. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1024 CAVIOLA ET AL. planned medical experiment at the university’s medical science lab. The research was described as involving experimentation on either 50 young pigs or human infants, depending on the condition, in order to develop a medicine that would help thousands of sick pigs or human infants. The text stated that while the research could be painful for the test subjects, it would not have any long-term negative side effects. Next, participants were informed that due to ethical concerns of this planned medical research program the advocacy group Unethical Research Watch plans to fight against the implementation of the research. In order to do so, the advocacy group asked us to conduct a survey to assess the opinions of the general public, whose results will inform their campaign. As part of this alleged survey, participants were asked to indicate whether they consider the planned research program to be ethically justified or not, and whether they would like it to stop. On the next page, participants were told that if they shared the advocacy group’s view and wanted to support their campaign, they could do so by completing a short writing task. In particular, participants were told that the advocacy group is looking for the best arguments to support their view, which they could write down on the paper if they wished to support the campaign, and that we would forward their responses to the advocacy group in order for them to improve their campaign. Finally, participants were also given the opportu- nity to donate any amount between zero and 300 pennies of their £3 payment to support the advocacy group. Participants also completed the Speciesism Scale ( .73) and Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IH .80; OUS-IB .71), as well as demographic questions. At the end of the study, participants were debriefed about the fact that both the planned medical research program as well as the advocacy group were made up. Participants kept the money that they intended to donate. Results Participants considered the proposed medical research program significantly more ethically justified if it involved pigs ( M 5.39; SD 1.34) compared with human infants ( M 4.34; SD 1.77; Figure 7 ),t(183) 4.71, p .001, d .67. Similarly, they were significantly more likely to say that they wanted the program to stop if it involved infants ( M 3.49; SD 1.88) compared with pigs ( M 2.69; SD 1.50), t(189) 3.35, p .001, d .48. Next, we looked at the behavioral measures. Significantly more participants were willing to invest time to help to support the campaign of the activist organization fighting against the medical research program if the research involved human infants (38%) than pigs (19%), 2(1) 7.71, p .005. Finally, participants also donated significantly more money (pennies) to support the activist group if the research involved human infants ( M 51.52; SD 107.96) than pigs ( M 21.15; SD 70.27), t(169) 2.34, p .02, d .33. Because donations were not normally distributed, we conducted a Wilcoxon’s rank test, which supported the finding, W 5348.5, p .03. Figure 7. Moral permissibility of the medical research program that harms pigs to save many more pigs or human infants to save many more human infants, ranging from 1 ( completely unjustified ), to 4 ( neither justified nor unjustified ), to 7 ( completely justified ) (Study 6). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1025 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS Discussion This study replicated the effect we found in the previous studies in an offline student sample, namely that people have weaker deontological constraints for animals than for humans. This shows that the effect exists in the real-world context of medical experi- mentation and, crucially, that it translates into behavior. People were more willing to invest both their time and personal money to support an activist campaign against medical research on human infants than on pigs. Nevertheless, there was some degree of opposition to research on animals even when this would help thousands of other animals. This is in line with the multilevel weighted deontology model that suggests that deontological con- straints get weaker, but do not disappear, the lower the perceived moral status of the respective individual. Figure 7 suggests that responses in the infants condition were bimodal. While one group of participants considered the medical research program mostly justifiable, another group considered it mostly unjustifiable. In the pigs condition, in contrast, all partic- ipants considered it justifiable. Because we did not find the same bimodal pattern in any of our previous studies, it is likely that the pattern is specific to this study. It may be that some participants considered this particular medical research project less harmful than others. One possible reason is that the ratio of harmed and help beings was bigger (harm 50 to help thousands) in this study than in previous studies (e.g., harm 10 to help 100). Study 7: Social Connectedness While we found support for the harm aversion mediated spe- ciesism model in our previous studies, it might be objected that this model leaves out a potentially important factor. That is the possi- bility that people are more willing to harm animals because they feel less socially connected to them ( Petrinovich et al., 1993 ). Because people generally feel less socially connected to animals than to other humans, this possibility offers an alternative expla- nation of the effect we observed in the previous studies. In Study 7, we tested this hypothesis. To test that whether social connectedness could explain our effect, we employe d a 2 species (humans vs. dogs) 2 social connectedness (close vs. distant) between-subjects study design. Our hypothesis was that participants would continue to hold stron- ger deontological constraints against harming dogs than humans even when social connectedness is held constant. Method Participants. We recruited 302 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.40 payment for their participation. One participant was excluded for failing an attention check, leav- ing a final sample of 301 people (143 females; Mage 41.69, SD 12.85). We aimed for a sample size of 300 participants, as our a priori power analysis showed that 301 participants were required to detect a medium effect size of f .18, with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80. Design, materials, and procedure. Participants in the close conditions were first told that they should imagine that all six people (or dogs) described in the scenario were their own brothers (or dogs) that they care very much about. In the distant conditions, they were told to imagine that all six people (or dogs) came from a country far away, that they have never met them before and will never meet them again in the future. Then participants were presented with a moral dilemma similar to the vaccine dilemma used in Study 1 in which they were asked whether they would actively infect one unaffected individual, and by doing so killing it, in order to save five others of the same type. Like in Study 1, participants responded on a 7-point scale ranging from 1 ( abso- lutely morally wrong )to7( absolutely morally right ). On the next pages, participants were presented with follow-up questions. First, we measured perceived social connectedness ( .99), which served as a manipulation check using three items, such as “How socially connected do you feel with the brothers/strang- ers/dogs (described in the previous scenario)?” on 9-point response scale from not at all socially connected to extremely socially connected . Next, we measured harm aversion ( .95) and perceived suffering capacity ( .92) adjusted to the respective experimental condition with similar measures as in Studies 1 and 2. Finally, participants responded to the Speciesism Scale ( .88), the Empathic Concern Scale ( .94), and demographic questions. Results A two-way ANOVA revealed a main effect for the species factor but neither main effect for the social connectedness nor an interaction effect (see Table 12 ). In line with our previous studies, participants considered it significantly more permissible to harm one dog to save five dogs than to harm one human to save many humans, F(1, 297) 31.10, p .001, p 2 .09 (see Figure 8 ). The social connectedness factor made no difference, F(1, 297) 0.02, p .90, p 2 .001. Participants considered it roughly equally permissible to harm their own brother to save five other brothers as to harm a stranger to save five strangers, p .79, d .14. Similarly, participants considered it roughly equally permissible to harm their own dog to save five other own dogs as to harm a dog they do not know to save five other dogs they do not know, p .69, d .19. As such, there was no significant interaction effect between species and social connectedness, F(1, 297) 2.02, p .16, p 2 .006. Social connectedness ratings were significantly lower (i.e., less close) in the distant compared to in the close conditions, F(1, Table 12 Descriptive Statistics of Moral Permissibility and Scales (Study 7) Species Humans Dogs Social connectedness Close Distant Close Distant Moral permissibility 3.32 (1.97) 3.04 (1.95) 4.22 (1.78) 4.55 (1.81) Social connectedness 7.28 (2.15) 2.67 (2.11) 7.45 (1.87) 4.23 (2.53)Harm aversion 7.71 (1.88) 7.22 (1.87) 7.60 (1.55) 6.41 (1.98)Suffering capacity 7.4 (1.37) 7.29 (1.60) 6.87 (1.75) 6.50 (1.71) Note. M (SD) Moral permissibility on a scale from 1 ( wrong )to7( right ), social connectedness on a scale from 1 ( distant )to9( close ), harm aversion on a scale from 1 ( mild )to9( maximum ), suffering capacity on a scale from 1( mild )to9( maximum ). Displayed results for social connectedness, harm aversion and suffering capacity are aggregated responses of three itemseach. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1026 CAVIOLA ET AL. 297) 241.73, p .001, p 2 0.45, which serves as a manipu- lation check. They were also lower for humans than dogs, F(1, 297) 11.68, p .001, p 2 0.04. And the difference in perceived social connectedness between brothers and strangers was greater than the difference in perceived social connectedness between one’s own dogs and dogs one doesn’t know, F(1, 297) 7.64, p .006, p 2 .03. Harm aversion ratings were stronger in the close compared with the distant conditions, F(1, 297) 15.82, p .001, p 2 0.05. Harm aversion for dogs was weaker than harm aversion for hu- mans, F(1, 297) 4.89, p .03, p 2 0.02. There was no significant interaction effect for harm aversion, F(1, 297) 2.72, p .10, p 2 .009. Suffering capacity ratings were lower for dogs than for humans, F(1, 297) 12.70, p .001, p 2 0.04. There was neither an effect of social connectedness on suffering capacity, F (1, 297) 1.74, p .19, p 2 .005, nor was there a significant interaction effect for suffering capacity, F(1, 297) 0.50, p .48, p 2 .002. Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition (humans vs. dogs) and moral permissibility was mediated by harm aversion. The bootstrapped indirect effect was (.47)( .19) .09, 95% CI [ .21, .02]. Thus, the indirect effect was statistically significant. We conducted a hierarchical regression to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 13 ). We found that speciesism did not signif- icantly moderate the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion was .13 ( p .10) in the humans condition and .25 ( p .001) in the dogs condition (see Table 14 ). However, perceived suffering capacity significantly predicted harm aversion. Thus, our model was only partly supported. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between specie- sism and suffering capacity was stronger in the dogs condition, r .32, p .001 than in the humans condition, r .14, p .09. Speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto suffering capacity ( .34, p .03). Figure 8. Moral permissibility of harming one to save five individuals, ranging from 1 ( Absolutely morally wrong ), over 4 ( Neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( Absolutely morally right ). Close humans were described as one’s own brothers, close dogs as one’s own dogs, distant humans as strangers, distant dogs as dogs one does not know.(Study 7). See the online article for the color version of this figure. Table 13 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 7) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .10 .36 Condition (Species) .06 .02 Social connectedness .23 .18 Speciesism .29 .10 Speciesism Condition .24 .05 Suffering .54 Note. Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for humans and as 0 for dogs. Social connectedness was coded as 1 forclose and as 0 for distant. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1027 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS Discussion The results of this study suggest that social connectedness cannot explain why people hold weaker deontological constraints for animals than humans. Instead, other factors associated with species-membership or species-membership itself must explain it. This suggests that the harm aversion mediated speciesism model does not need to be extended by including a social connectedness factor. Despite this, the harm aversion mediated speciesism model was only partly supported by our results. Similar to Studies 1, 2, and 3, we found that harm aversion mediated the effect of condition to moral permissibility. And we again found that perceived suffering capacity drove harm aversion. However, in contrast to the previous studies, we found no significant moderation of speciesism on the relationship between condition and harm aversion. One possible explanation is that we used dogs in the current study. Recent research has shown that even speciesists can have a strong emo- tional attachment to dog, a paradigmatic pet animal ( Caviola & Capraro, 2020 )— especially if it is their own dog. Thus, the effect of speciesism on the aversion to harming dogs might be less pronounced than its effect on the aversion to harming other ani- mals, such as pigs. Indeed, in Study 1 we found that the modera- tion effect was weaker for dogs than for pigs. It thus may well be that the effect would have been significant had we used pigs instead of dogs. However, because the correlation between spe- ciesism and aversion to harm dogs was stronger ( r .25) than between speciesism and aversion to harm humans ( r .13), it is also possible that a moderation effect could be detected with a higher sample size. Either way, the results of this study demon- strate the robust relationship between species-membership, per- ceived suffering capacity, and harm aversion, which determines moral permissibility of harming a few for the greater good. Finally, despite the fact that speciesism did not significantly moderate the effect of condition onto harm aversion, it did significantly mod- erate the effect of condition onto perceived suffering capacity. That is, the more speciesist participants were the weaker they perceived the suffering capacity of dogs to be, which could in turn lead to reduced aversion to harm dogs. Kurzban, DeScioli, and Fein (2012) found that people are more willing to harm their brother to save five brothers than they are to harm a stranger to save five strangers. In our study, we did not replicate these findings. Despite the fact that participants rated their social connection to the strangers as much more distant than to their brothers (as per our manipulation check), participants considered it equally permissible to harm one brother to save five brothers than to harm one stranger to save five strangers. One might even wonder whether multilevel weighted deontology would not predict that people should have weaker deontological constraints for strangers than for brothers, because people arguably care more about their brothers. However, it is unlikely that people believe that their brothers have a higher moral status than other human beings in an absolute sense. Instead, they rather believe that they have a special obligation to their brothers than to strangers. It is possible to believe that one has special (agent-relative) obliga- tions to certain people while still believing that all people have the same absolute moral status, and that they therefore possess the same rights. By contrast, as we have shown in other work, peo- ple—at least to some extent— believe that humans have a higher moral status than animals in an absolute sense ( Caviola et al., 2020 ). Study 8: Cognitive Capacity and “Marginal Cases” Humans typically possess a more advanced cognitive capacity than animals. In philosophical discussion, the advanced cognitive capacity of humans— enabling language use, complex thought, and explicit reasoning and deliberation—is often seen as the basis for rational agency or “personhood” and thus as a central source of moral status. On Kant’s view, which we discussed earlier ( Kant, 1785/1870 ), rational agency is the only basis for moral status. But even those who reject Kant’s extreme view often accept that rational agency endows a being with superior moral status and is the only basis for moral rights, including deontological protections against being harmed in order to promote a greater good (cf. Gruen, 2011 ). It is thus possible that people grant humans stronger deontological constraints because they possess such an advanced cognitive capacity that animals lack. In Study 8, we tested this hypothesis. One way to test this hypothesis is to look at so-called “marginal cases,” as they are used in philosophical discussions ( Singer, 1993 ). These are cases in which humans, such as infants or cognitively severely impaired people, have a cognitive capacity that is similar to, or even lower than, that of some animals. If it can be demonstrated that people grant stronger deontological con- straints to humans than animals, even when these humans have lower cognitive capacity than the respective animals, this would suggest that cognitive capacity cannot be a sufficient explanation of the effect in question. In our study, we made use of such marginal cases in our experimental paradigm. Those who appeal to this example tend to interpret the prioritization of marginal cases over animals as showing that people are speciesist ( Singer, 1975 ). Method Participants. We recruited 238 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.45 payment for their participation. Five participants were excluded for failing an attention check, leaving a final sample of 233 people (94 females; Mage 37.69, SD 10.99). We aimed for a sample size of at least 210 partic- ipants. Design, materials, and procedure. Participants were again presented with a modified version of the vaccine dilemma from the previous study. There were two conditions: patients and chimpan- zees. In the chimpanzees condition, participants were asked to Table 14 Correlations Between Measures (Study 7) Factor Permissibility Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering EC Speciesism .09 Harm aversion .21 .18 Suffering .36 .21 .58 EC .07 .20 .25 .19 Condition .31 .08 .12 .20 .01 Note. EC empathic concern. Condition was coded as 1 for humans and as 0 for dogs. p .05. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1028 CAVIOLA ET AL. imagine a scenario where there are two shelters that host chim- panzees. The chimpanzees were described as being relatively intelligent, in comparison with other animals: as having ways of communicating and of forming social relationships, and as being able, in a limited way, to plan for the future and make autonomous, informed decisions. It was also stated that some researchers be- lieve that chimpanzees are self-aware. In the patients conditions, participants were asked to imagine that there are two clinics that host severely cognitively impaired humans. These humans were described as having very limited intelligence, even lower than those of the chimpanzees in the other condition. Finally, in both conditions it was made clear that the chimpanzees (or patients, respectively) are capable of experiencing physical and emotional pain. Next, as in our prior vaccine dilemmas, participants were asked whether they consider it morally right or wrong to actively kill 10 unaffected chimpanzees (patients) to save 100 other chim- panzees (patients) on a 7-point scale. Participants were then presented with questions about the per- ceived cognitive capacity (intelligence, rationality, and capability of planning into the future; .93) of the respective beings, their perceived suffering capacity ( .96) and aversion to harm these beings ( .91). Finally, participants responded to the Speciesism Scale ( .90), the Empathic Concern Scale ( .89), and demographic questions. Results Chimpanzees were perceived to have a higher cognitive capac- ity ( M 6.01; SD 1.50) than severely cognitively impaired humans ( M 3.74, SD 2.38), t(196) 8.76, p .001, d 1.45, which served as a manipulation check. Participants consid- ered it more permissible to harm 10 chimpanzees in order to save 100 chimpanzees ( M 4.43, SD 1.79) than to harm 10 severely cognitively impaired humans to save 100 severely cognitively impaired humans ( M 3.47, SD 2.02; Figure 9 ),t(228) 3.85, p .001, d .50. Harm aversion for chimpanzees ( M 6.62; SD 1.78) was significantly lower than for patients ( M 7.10, SD 1.85), t(231) 2.01, p .045, d .26. Perceived suffering capacity for chimpanzees ( M 5.20, SD 2.51) was not significantly different than for patients ( M 5.11, SD 2.57), t (231) 0.27, p .79, d .04. Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition (patients vs. chimpanzees) and moral permissibility was mediated by harm aversion. The boot- strapped indirect effect was (.48)( .31) .15, 95% CI [ .33, .02]. Thus, the indirect effect was statistically significant. We conducted a hierarchical regression to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 15 ). We found that speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion Figure 9. Moral permissibility of harming 10 chimpanzees to save 100 chimpanzees or of harming 10 severely cognitively impaired humans (with a lower cognitive capacity than the chimpanzees) to save 100 severelycognitively impaired humans, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), over 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7( absolutely morally right ) (Study 8). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1029 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS was .20 ( p .03) in the cognitively impaired humans condition and .43 ( p .001) in the chimpanzee condition (see Table 16 ). In addition, both perceived suffering capacity (positively) and perceived cognitive capacity (negatively) predicted harm aversion. Thus, the harm aversion mediated speciesism model was con- firmed. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between specie- sism and perceived cognitive capacity was .14 ( p .12) in the chimpanzees condition and .41 ( p .001) in the humans condi- tion. Speciesism significantly moderated the effect of condition onto perceived cognitive capacity ( .68, p .001). And we found that the bivariate correlation between speciesism and suf- fering capacity was .09 ( p .33) in the chimpanzees condition and .16 ( p .08) in the humans condition. Speciesism did not significantly moderate the effect of condition onto suffering ca- pacity ( .33, p .06). Discussion This study showed that people hold stronger deontological con- straints against harming humans than against harming animals even in cases where they perceive the humans to have lower cognitive capacity than the animals. In line with the harm aversion mediated speciesism model, participants were more averse to harm the humans than the chimpanzees. This was the case despite the fact that people perceived them both to be similarly capable of suffering. We also found, in line with the model’s predictions, that speciesism moderated the effect of condition onto harm aversion. That is, the more speciesist participants were, the less averse they were to harm the chimpanzees in particular. In line with the model, perceived suffering capacity and perceived cognitive capacity were also significant predictors of harm aversion. Overall, these results confirm our model. They show that the reduced harm aversion for animals is multiply determined and cannot be fully explained by perceived cognitive capacity alone. Study 9: Cognitive Capacity in a Hypothetical Species In Study 8 we found that people hold stronger deontological constraints against harming humans than animals even in cases where they perceive the humans to have a lower cognitive capacity than the animals. This suggests that other factors must explain the effect. However, it does not rule out that cognitive capacity still partly contributes to the effect. In Study 9, we examined whether cognitive capacity partly drives deontological constraints against harm if everything else—including species—is held constant. To test this, we presented participants with scenarios involving a hypothetical extraterrestrial species who either had advanced or basic cognitive capacity and who either had a low or a high degree of suffering capacity. Our study was inspired by a study conducted by Sytsma and Machery (2012) who found that participants con- sidered it more wrong to harm cognitively advanced, compared with cognitively basic, beings to benefit humans. Our hypothesis, which we preregistered at https://osf.io/24vwr/ , was that participants consider harming individuals with an ad- vanced cognitive capacity (just like humans) to be wrong but individuals with a basic cognitive capacity (just like animals) to be generally permissible. In addition, we also manipulated suffering capacity. We hypothesized that participants consider harming in- dividuals with a high suffering capacity to be more morally wrong than individuals with a low suffering capacity. Method Participants. We recruited 812 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.5 payment for their participation. One-hundred and 87 were excluded for failing at least one atten- tion check or manipulation check, leaving a final sample of 625 people (307 females; Mage 35.72, SD 11.30). We expected a small effect size. Our analysis showed that 787 participants were required to detect an effect size of f .1 with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80. We aimed to recruit 800 participants to account for any exclusions. Design, materials, and procedure. The study ha d a 2 (cog- nitive capacity: basic vs. advanced) 2 (suffering capacity: low vs. high) study design with both factors being manipulated be- Table 16 Correlations Between Measures (Study 8) Factor Permissibility Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering Cognitive capacity EC Speciesism .31 Harm aversion .32 .32 Suffering .04 .04 .18 Cognitive capacity .43 .20 .17 .17 EC .25 .43 .26 .02 .18 Condition .25 .07 .13 .02 .50 .11† Note .EC empathic concern. Condition was coded as 1 for cognitively impaired humans and as 0 for chimpanzees.†p .10. p .05. p .01. p .001. Table 15 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 8) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .11 .16 Condition .15 .26 Speciesism .43 .42 Speciesism Condition .30 † .34 Suffering .20 Cognitive capacity .16 Note. Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for cognitively impaired humans and as 0 for chimpanzees.†p .10. p .05. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1030 CAVIOLA ET AL. tween subjects. This study design and stimulus were loosely based on the study by Sytsma and Machery (2012) . Participants read a fictional paragraph about a planet on a nearby solar system on which extraterrestrial individuals called “Atlans” are the dominant form of life. Participants then read one of four descriptions of the Atlans depending on condition. The Atlans were described as either having suffering capacity (“feel pleasure and pain as well as other emotions such as fear, anger, and sadness”) or as having no suffering capacity (“don’t feel pleasure or pain or any other emo- tions such as fear, anger, or sadness”). Further, they were de- scribed as either having an advanced cognitive capacity (“have opinions, beliefs, desires, language, and culture. [. . .] can make decisions for themselves. [. . .] make plans for their long-term future”) or as having a basic cognitive capacity (“don’t have opinions, beliefs, desires, language, or culture, [. . .] respond to their environment purely based on impulse and instinct [. . .] don’t make plans for their long-term”). Following these descriptions, participants were given the vac- cine scenario from Study 1, according to which 10 healthy Atlans needed to be killed to develop a vaccine to save 100 other Atlans from dying of a disease. Next, participants responded to manipu- lation check questions, which tested whether they correctly under- stood and remembered what cognitive capacity level or suffering capacity level the extraterrestrials had. Finally, participants com- pleted the Speciesism Scale ( .88), the Oxford Utilitarianism Scale (OUS-IH .78; OUS-IB .73), and answered demo- graphic questions. Results A two-way ANOVA revealed that participants considered it more permissible to harm 10 individuals to save 100 individuals when these individuals had a basic cognitive capacity compared with if they had an advanced cognitive capacity, F(1, 621) 10.56, p .001, p 2 .02 (see Figure 10 ). However, the level of suffering capacity made no difference on moral judgments, F(1, 621) 0.34, p 0.56, p 2 .001, nor was there an interaction between cognitive capacity and suffering capacity F(1, 621) 0.06, p .80, p 2 .001. In post hoc tests moral permissibility ratings for individuals without suffering capacity that either were cognitively basic ( M 4.44, SD 1.71) or cognitively advanced ( M 3.95, SD 1.83) did not differ statistically significantly, p .07, d .28. Similarly, in post hoc tests moral permissibility ratings for individuals with suffering capacity that either were cognitively basic ( M 4.33, SD 1.74) or cognitively advanced ( M 3.90, SD 1.81) did not differ statistically significantly, p .14, d .24. Discussion The results of this study revealed that people hold stronger deontological constraints against harming cognitively advanced beings compared with cognitively basic beings. This suggests that the reason why people hold stronger deontological constraints against harming animals than humans may be partly explained by the fact that people perceive animals to have a lower cognitive Figure 10. Moral permissibility of harming 10 individuals of a hypothetical species to saving 100 individuals of the same species, ranging from 1 ( absolutely morally wrong ), to 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ) (Study 9). See the online article for the color version of this figure. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1031 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS capacity than humans. However, as we have seen in Study 8, cognitive capacity cannot be the full explanation because people continue to have stronger deontological constraints for humans even in cases where they have lower cognitive capacity than animals. By contrast, the deontological constraints people hold for beings with higher suffering capacity were identical to the deontological constraints people hold for beings with lower suffering capacity. This is in line with Sytsma and Machery (2012) who also found no difference between people’s judgments of harming sentient versus nonsentient individuals to benefit humans, using a similar manip- ulation to the one used here. This lack of effect is surprising considering that in our previous studies we found that perceived suffering capacity predicted harm aversion and correlated with moral permissibility. It is also inconsistent with the finding that people are less likely to harm robots to save many humans if the robots are described as having high degree of affective experience than low degree ( Nijssen et al., 2019 ). One possibility is that our suffering capacity manipulation was suboptimal because it only focused on the ability to experience hedonic states and emotions, but not on an individual’s level of consciousness. In Study 10 we address this by relying on an improved manipulation for suffering capacity. Another limitation of this study is that participants may have found it hard to imagine extraterrestrial beings. The psychological distance for extraterrestrials may be higher than for terrestrial animals, which people know and may have even interacted with. It is therefore possible that people’s thinking about animals and extraterrestrials fundamentally differs, which could make real world inferences from this study difficult. Study 10: Suffering Capacity In Study 8, we found that people held stronger deontological constraints for humans than animals even when they perceived the humans to have a lower cognitive capacity than the animals. This showed that differences in perceived cognitive capacity cannot be the full explanation of the effect. In Study 10, we turned to the related question of whether differences in perceived suffering capacity could explain the effect. In the previous studies we found that participants perceived animals to have a lower capacity to suffer than humans. It could, therefore, be that the weaker deon- tological constraints against harming animals could be completely explained by the fact that people perceive animals to have lower capacity to suffer. The capacity to suffer is widely regarded as a key driver of the aversion people have to harming others ( Gray et al., 2012 ). (Note that even a utilitarian antispeciesist would prior- itize humans over animals if they believe animals suffer less than humans, cf. Singer, 1975 .) To test that hypothesis, we experimen- tally manipulated suffering capacity. More specifically, we pre- sented participants either with a scenario that involved humans in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) who cannot experience any suffering but are still alive, or one that involved young dogs that were described as having extremely high capacity to suffer. As such, there were two conditions: puppies and patients. Although the studies reported so far confirm the hypothesis that harm aversion plays a key role in explaining why people find it more permissible to harm animals compared with humans, it is plausible that differences in degree of harm aversion cannot fully explain the superior moral status that people ascribe to humans. A number of philosophers have argued that “human” is used as a moral term and that to classify someone as human is already to regard them as meriting special treatment, regardless of what other capacities they may or may not possess ( Diamond, 1978 ;Wil- liams, 2009 ; for a critical approach to this tendency, see Singer, 1975 ). Indeed, many would be horrified by the idea that we could use living anencephalic human infants in scientific experiments or for organ donation, although such humans lack the capacity to feel pain or any other experience ( McMahan, 2002 ). Our hypothesis was therefore that participants would continue to find it more permissible to harm a few puppies to save many puppies than to harm a few human patients to save many human patients, despite being more averse to harm the puppies and believing that the patients have lower suffering capacity than the puppies do. Method Participants. We recruited 203 American participants online via MTurk who received $0.40 payment for their participation. Two participants were excluded for failing an attention check, leaving a final sample of 201 people (93 females; Mage 40.93, SD 12.86). We aimed for a sample size of 210 participants, as our a priori power analysis showed that 200 participants were required to detect a medium effect size of d .4, with an alpha of 0.05, and power of 0.80. Design, materials, and procedure. Participants were again presented with a modified version of the vaccine dilemma from Study 1. In the puppies condition, participants were told that there are two dog shelters that host many young puppies. The puppies were described as follows: “These puppies have an extremely high capacity to experience happiness and pain. Usually they are very happy and jump around all day long. But if they get harmed, they experience extremely strong pain.” In the patients conditions, participants were told that there are two clinics that host PVS (persistent vegetative state) patients. The patients were described as follows: “These patients have severe brain damage and have therefore permanently lost the capacity to experience any happi- ness or pain. They will never feel anything, but they are still alive. This means that if they get harmed, they will experience absolutely no pain.” Next, as in prior vaccine dilemmas, participants were asked whether they consider it morally right or wrong to actively kill 10 unaffected puppies/PVS patients to save 100 other puppies/ PVS patients. On the next pages, participants were asked questions about the perceived suffering capacity ( .98) and harm aversion ( .95). The questions were identical to the ones asked in Study 4 with the only difference that, in the three suffering capacity items, point 1 of the response scale was not suffering at all ,no pain at all , and not feel hurt at all to account for the fact that in this particular study the patients were described as having no suffering capacity at all. Finally, participants responded to the Speciesism Scale ( .89), Empathic Concern Scale ( .94), and demographic ques- tions. Results Participants considered it more permissible to harm 10 puppies in order to save 100 puppies ( M 3.80; SD 1.96) than to harm This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1032 CAVIOLA ET AL. 10 PVS patients to save 100 PVS patients ( M 3.10, SD 1.78; Figure 11 ),t(198) 2.66, p .008, d .38. Harm aversion for dogs ( M 7.73; SD 1.48) was stronger than for patients ( M 6.91, SD 2.07), t(177) 3.23, p .001, d .46. Perceived suffering capacity for puppies ( M 7.90, SD 1.05) was con- siderably higher than for patients ( M 3.32; SD 2.69), t(127) 15.82, p .001, d 2.25, which served as a manipulation check. Next, we tested the harm aversion mediated speciesism model. The relationship between condition (patients vs. puppies) and moral permissibility was mediated by harm aversion. The boot- strapped indirect effect was ( .82)( .29) .23, 95% CI [.06, .45]. Thus, the indirect effect was statistically significant. How- ever, note that in comparison with the other studies, the indirect effect was positive because participants were more averse to harm the puppies than the patients. We conducted a hierarchical regres- sion to test which factors were driving harm aversion (see Table 17 ). We found that speciesism did not moderate the effect of condition onto harm aversion. The bivariate correlation between speciesism and harm aversion was .24 ( p .02) in the patients condition and .34 ( p .001) in the puppies condition (see Table 18 ). However, perceived suffering capacity significantly predicted harm aversion. Thus, in line with our specific prediction for this study, the harm aversion mediated speciesism model was only partly supported. Finally, we found that the bivariate correlation between specie- sism and suffering capacity was stronger in the puppies condition, r .36, p .001 than in the patients condition, r .15, p .13. Despite this, speciesism did not significantly moderate the effect of condition onto suffering capacity ( .001, p 1.0), which is because differences in suffering capacity were mostly explained by condition itself ( .74, p .001). Discussion The results of this study demonstrate that perceived suffering capacity alone cannot explain why people have weaker deonto- logical constraints against harming animals than humans. Even in the extreme case we relied on in this study, in which the humans were described as having no suffering capacity at all and the Figure 11. Moral permissibility of harming 10 puppies to save 100 puppies or of harming 10 persistent vegetative state patients (described as having no suffering capacity) to save 100 PVS patients, ranging from 1( absolutely morally wrong ), over 4 ( neither right nor wrong ), to 7 ( absolutely morally right ) (Study 10). See the online article for the color version of this figure. Table 17 Hierarchical Regression Predicting Harm Aversion (Study 10) Predictor measures Step 1 Step 2 R2 .11 .17 Condition .23 .06 Speciesism .28 .23 Speciesism Condition .04 .04 Suffering .40 Note . Displaying standardized coefficients . Condition was coded as 1 for PVS patients and as 0 for puppies. p .05. p .01. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1033 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS animals were described as having extremely strong suffering ca- pacity (and in addition having used an animal that people typically find particularly cute and likable), participants consider it more permissible to harm animals than humans for the greater good. This suggests, in line with our hypothesis for this study, that there must be factors above and beyond perceptions of suffering capac- ity that contribute to the differences in strength of deontological constraints for animals and humans. It is thus not surprising that the harm aversion mediated specie- sism model was only partly supported. In line with the model, suffering capacity predicted harm aversion such that participants were more averse to harming puppies than the humans (PVS patients) because they perceived the puppies to have greater suf- fering capacity. However, participants still considered it more permissible to harm a few puppies to save many than to harm a few PVS patients to save many despite having a greater general aver- sion to harm the puppies than the humans. This is in conflict with a model that assumes that moral permissibility is entirely driven by harm aversion. Moreover, we found no statistically significant moderation of speciesism onto the relationship between condition and harm aver- sion. One possible explanation could be that—similar to Study 7—speciesism reduces the aversion to harm dogs (and in particular cute puppies) less than the aversion to harm other animals. How- ever, note that despite the nonsignificant moderation, the correla- tion between speciesism and aversion to harm puppies was stron- ger ( r .34) than between speciesism and aversion to harm humans ( r .24). Therefore, it is also possible that a moderation effect could be detected with a higher sample size. Either way, this study suggests that the speciesism moderation effect alone is unlikely to be the only driver of the effect. Overall, these results suggest that further psychological factors can drive judgments about the permissibility of harm to humans and animals. In particular, the findings suggest that harm aversion is not the only mediator between species-membership and moral permissibility. One possibility is that speciesism could affect moral permissibility above and beyond the harm aversion path. For example, as mentioned in the introduction of this study, people may perceive humans, but not animals, to be deserving of special moral treatment irrespective of their capacity to suffer. General Discussion Across 10 studies we found that people consider it more per- missible to harm a few animals to save many animals than to harm a few humans to save many humans. The effect robustly showed in different types of dilemmas: in personal (footbridge case) and impersonal (sidetrack case) sacrificial dilemmas (Study 2), in both abstract (Study 4) and concrete (e.g., vaccination, Studies 1–3, 5–10) dilemmas, and even in the real-world context of opposition to medical experimentation (Study 6). While deontological con- straints against harming humans were much stronger than those against harming animals, they differed slightly in strength for different animals. For example, deontological constraints against harming dogs were stronger than those against harming pigs (Study 1). Some people even showed deontological constraints for objects, albeit very weak ones (Study 5). These findings closely fit the view we called multilevel weighted deontology, on which there are deontological constraints against harming animals but these are considerably weaker than those enjoyed by humans. By contrast, our findings are hard to reconcile with the competing views we outlined in the introduc- tion. Utilitarianism and cross species deontology can be ruled out because people generally value humans more than animals. Kant’s view can be ruled out because people do value animals at least to some extent (although this could also be due to instrumental reasons). Multilevel uniform deontology cannot accommodate the consistent finding that deontological constraints against harming animals are weaker than those against harming humans even if many of the same respective beings can be saved. Nozick’s “util- itarianism for animals, Kantianism for people” is often thought to reflect commonsense intuitions ( Kagan, 2019 ;Killoren & Strei- ffer, 2019 ). However, while being a good first approximation, Nozick’s slogan does not account for the fact that people do have deontological constraints for animals and therefore are not com- pletely “utilitarian” for animals. Furthermore, it does not account for the fact that deontological constraints can differ for different types of animals. Multilevel weighted deontology, in contrast, appropriately captures the finding that deontological constraints get weaker—without completely disappearing—the less people value the beings at stake. Although there was individual variation in the degree to which participants were willing to sacrifice some animals to save a greater number—with some participants dem- onstrating no inhibition about harming animals in such moral contexts— our data suggest that the majority of participants’ re- sponses is better described by multilevel weighted deontology than by any of the other discussed moral views. Underlying Factors of the Reduced Deontological Aversion to Harm Animals We are not claiming that people explicitly endorse and follow the principles of multilevel weighted deontology; it is unlikely that people explicitly grant deontological constraints to individuals and consciously weigh these constraints by the moral status they attri- bute to these individuals. Rather, our claim is that multilevel weighted deontology is an accurate philosophical description of the pattern of moral judgments people make. This, however, leaves open the question of what psychological mechanisms underlie these judgment patterns. In the introduction we hypothesized that people would consider it more permissible to harm animals than humans for the greater good because of a reduced general aversion to harm animals than humans (mediation from condition via harm aversion to moral permissibility). Further, we hypothesized that harm aversion is Table 18 Correlations Between Measures (Study 10) Factor Permissibility Speciesism Harm aversion Suffering EC Speciesism .27 Harm aversion .22 .28 Suffering .08 .18 .37 EC .17 .29 .44 .08 Condition .19 .07 .22 .75 .01 Note .EC empathic concern. Condition was coded as 1 for PVS patients and as 0 for puppies. p .05. p .01. p .001. This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1034 CAVIOLA ET AL. driven by perceived suffering capacity and perceived cognitive capacity and that harm aversion for animals is affected more by speciesism than harm aversion for humans (moderation). Across our studies we tested this harm aversion mediated speciesism model and found support for it. However, that was not the case in all the studies, suggesting that further factors might be involved. Harm aversion. Across our studies we found evidence that the weaker deontological constraints against harming animals than against harming humans are likely driven by a weaker aversion to harm animals in general. In Study 3, we systematically teased apart the deontological inclination to avoid harm from the utilitarian inclination to help as many as possible and found that the deon- tological inclination to avoid harm was much weaker for animals than for humans. In contrast, the utilitarian inclination did not statistically differ for animals and humans. In the majority of the studies in which we included the self-report harm aversion scales, we found that harm aversion significantly mediated the effect from condition (humans vs. animals) to moral permissibility. In Study 10, we found that participants had stronger deontologi- cal constraints for patients in the persistent vegetative state than for puppies despite being more averse to harming the puppies. This suggests that harm aversion might not be the only driver of moral permissibility and that future research could expand our model to include further drivers of moral permissibility. One possibility is that people ascribe a special moral status to humans simply in virtue of them being human, regardless of their capacity for suf- fering or cognitive capacity. The philosopher Bernard Williams, for example, wrote that “creatures are treated in one way rather than another simply because they belong to a certain category, the human species. We do not . . . need to know any more about them” ( Williams, 2009 , p. 84). Setting this exception aside, our studies demonstrate that harm aversion is a strong predictor of the perceived moral permissibility of harming few to save a greater number. But what are the drivers of harm aversion? Because humans and animals differ in many ways, we investigated several possible factors that could explain why people are less averse to harming animals than humans. Social connectedness. In Study 7, we ruled out the possibility that the effect can be explained by the fact that people feel less socially connected to animals. We found that participants’ deon- tological constraints against harming animals were still weaker than those against harming humans, even if participants felt more socially connected to the animals (e.g., their own dogs) than to the humans (e.g., complete strangers). Suffering capacity. In all six studies in which we included the perceived suffering capacity scales, we found that perceived suf- fering capacity was a significant predictor of harm aversion. And because participants tended to believe that animals are less capable of suffering than humans (apart as expected from Study 10), this suggests that perceived suffering capacity could indeed partly explain why animals are granted weaker deontological constraints than humans. However, despite the important role of perceived suffering capacity, our findings show that it cannot explain the effect fully. In Study 10, participants continued to have stronger deontological constraints for humans than animals even in cases where the humans have no suffering capacity at all (PVS patients) and the animals have an extremely strong suffering capacity. Cognitive capacity. In Study 9, we found that participants held stronger deontological constraints against harming hypothet- ical beings with an advanced cognitive capacity than against harming hypothetical beings with a basic cognitive capacity. Be- cause humans generally have a more advanced cognitive capacity than animals, this suggests that perceived cognitive capacity could partly explain the effect. This result is in line with the Kantian idea that a higher cognitive capacity—and in particular those aspects relating to rationality and autonomous agency—is ground for elevated moral status (even though people clearly reject the view, also associated with Kant, that animals have the same moral status as mere objects). However, although perceived cognitive capacity plays a role in driving judgments about the permissibility of harm, we found that it too cannot explain the effect fully. In Study 8, participants accepted stronger deontological constraints against harming humans who are severely cognitively impaired than against harming chimpanzees, even though participants believed that the chimpanzees had a more advanced cognitive capacity than the humans (including greater intelligence, rationality, ability to plan for the future, self-awareness, etc.). Speciesism. Our studies also offer evidence that in addition to the contributions made by perceived suffering capacity and cog- nitive capacity, reduced aversion to harming animals than humans is also partly driven by differential moral value attribution based on species-membership itself, that is, speciesism. According to this hypothesis, people are less averse to harm animals than humans simply because animals are animals and humans are humans. There are three convergent types of evidence supporting this hypothesis. First, in four of the six studies in which we measured harm aversion, we found that speciesism as measured by the Speciesism Scale ( Caviola et al., 2019 ) significantly moderated the effect of condition (humans vs. animals) onto harm aversion. In the two studies (Study 7 and 10) in which the moderation was not signif- icant the animal species were dogs. It is therefore possible that the lack of significant moderation effects in these studies was specific to the use of dogs, because speciesism appears to be a weaker predictor for aversion to harming dogs than aversion to harming other animals. Nevertheless, the lack of significant moderation in these two studies highlights that speciesism is not the only predic- tor of the reduced aversion to harm animals. Second, in the process dissociation study (Study 3) individual differences in speciesism correlated strongly ( r .65) with the deontological inclination against harming animals. Speciesism did not correlate with the deontological inclination against harming humans, and neither did it correlate with the utilitarian inclination to help as many humans or animals as possible. The process dissociation approach allowed us to disentangle the deontological and utilitarian inclinations from each other, which usually both contribute to the overall moral judgment in sacrificial moral di- lemmas (cf. Conway, & Gawronski, 2013 ). Third, throughout our studies we found that deontological con- straints against harming animals remained weaker than those against harming humans even when other plausible drivers, such as perceived suffering capacity, ascribed cognitive capacity, and so- cial connectedness were accounted for. Humans and animals differ on multiple dimensions and it is possible that there are other factors that we did not consider. However, the fact that a robust effect remains even after controlling for key factors suggested both by psychological research and ethical debate about moral status This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1035 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS provides probabilistic—if not conclusive— evidence for the spe- ciesism hypothesis. Furthermore, we found evidence that speciesism is associated with perceptions of reduced suffering capacity and reduced cog- nitive capacity of animals. This is in line with previous research showing that people tend to dementalize animals ( Bastian et al., 2012 ). It suggests that speciesism may not only reduce aversion to harm animals directly but also indirectly via attributing lower mental capacities to them, which in turn could reduce harm aver- sion. Our studies thus offer a degree of empirical support to the influential (if controversial) philosophical argument claiming that the common view that humans are morally more important than animals is based in speciesism ( McMahan, 2002 ;Singer, 1993 ). However, future research is called to explore in more detail why people have a greater willingness to harm animals than humans, even in cases where the humans suffer less and are less cognitively capable than the animals. In sum, our studies mostly confirm the harm aversion mediated speciesism model but also show that the model needs to be extended: People consider it more permissible to harm animals for the greater good than to humans for the greater because they have generally a weaker aversion to harm animals than humans. The weaker aversion to harm animals is driven in part by people believing that animals suffer less, and that they have a lower cognitive capacity, as well as by speciesism. It is possible that additional drivers of moral permissibility exist that we did not explore in our studies. Thus, the two models we have discussed in this article— harm aversion mediated speciesism and multilevel weighted deontolo- gy— both describe the moral judgments people make in our stud- ies. While multilevel weighted deontology is a philosophical de- scription of these judgments and is contrasted with alternative philosophical views, harm aversion mediated speciesism describes the psychological mechanisms of these judgments in more detail. They are two sides of the same coin. Moral Judgments in Cross-Species Sacrifice Cases So far, we have only focused on the type of individuals that have to be harmed but not those that can be helped. However, in the cross-species sacrifice cases of Study 4, we found that people also take into account what type of individuals can be saved. We found that people considered it only slightly more permissible to harm pigs to save many humans than to save many pigs. In contrast, people were much more sensitive to the type of individuals that could be saved if humans had to be harmed. They were strongly opposed to harming humans in order to save many pigs, whereas harming humans to save many humans was considered to be less wrong on average. How can this asymmetry be explained? One way to explain this is as follows: The lower the moral status of the individual that needs to be harmed, the weaker the deonto- logical constraint against harming that individual. The stronger the deontological constraints, the more difficult it is to overrule them. People have a rough threshold—that varies between individuals and contexts—for when to overrule a given deontological con- straint. Whether this threshold is met depends on the utilitarian cost-benefit analysis, which people will engage in if they are capable of doing so. In cases where animals have to be harmed to save either many animals or many humans, the threshold is clearly met in both cases—though because people value humans much more than animals, it is more easily met if humans instead of animals can be saved. In contrast, however, in cases where humans have to be harmed to save either many humans or many animals, the threshold is not clearly met, and the difference in how easily it is met is far greater than in the previous cases. The threshold for harming humans to save many humans may be met to some extent in some people. But because people value humans much more than animals, the threshold for harming humans to save animals will be met, if at all, only if a vast number of animals will be saved. As a consequence, the extent to which deontological constraints against harming are overruled differs across these four cases and results in the observed asymmetry. This explanation assumes that people assign a certain value to the life of a single animal and another value to the life of a single human—all using the same moral value “currency.” These values are then aggregated each based on the number of individuals on each side and contrasted against each other. The contrasted aggre- gated values are then matched against a common threshold value that is measured in this shared currency. An advantage of this explanation is that it could also deal with mixed sacrifice cases, such as a case where 55 pigs have to be harmed to save 50 pigs plus two humans, which is a type of case we did not test but future research could look into. A reason to be skeptical of the described view could be that it appears psychologically implausible that people engage in such complex calculations and rely on a common moral value currency. Instead, it may be more plausible that a much rougher estimate, that is itself partly affect-based, is at work. One possibility is that the threshold for when deontological constraints should be over- ruled is different depending on what type of individuals can be saved. When the threshold is lower, the lower the perceived moral status of the individuals that can be saved. This view, however, is harder to reconcile with the idea of a fixed aversive response against harming dictating the strength of the deontological con- straint because it suggests that the constraint against harming does not arise from an affective response to considerations of the harmful act in isolation, but is instead modulated by which indi- viduals would be saved by that act, and how many. In other words, on this view the degree of aversion to harm and the calculation of consequences interact rather than being generated independently, as is often assumed by current models of moral judgment. Implications for the Psychology of Moral Judgment Current psychological research on deontological rules against harming others often models such rules on Kant’s ethics, and therefore understands them as representing absolute prohibitions against certain actions. It is implausible, however, that lay people regard deontological rules as absolute in this way ( Kahane, 2015 ). Lay people’s intuitions accept a plurality of moral rules which can conflict in some cases. When this happens one rule will typically overrule another (e.g., we may break a minor promise if keeping it would be deeply unfair). Similarly, deontological constraints can be overruled when the consequences of following them are too severe—for example, lying when this will prevent murder and, more controversially, the use of “enhanced interrogation methods” to prevent terrorist attacks. The present research provides a dem- This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1036 CAVIOLA ET AL. onstration of this central feature of commonsense morality. While the absolutist understanding of deontological rules suggest the all-or-nothing picture suggested by Nozick’s proposal—absolute prohibitions protecting humans, cost-benefit analysis for ani- mals— our findings strongly support a multilevel weighted deon- tology account of judgments about harm toward humans and animals. We repeatedly found that deontological constraints are a matter of degree. And when and whether they will be overruled is a function both of the individuals to be harmed, the individuals to be saved, and the numbers of each. Our findings consequently also show that moral thinking about harm to humans and animals is not fundamentally different but rather varies in degree. People value animals much less than humans and accordingly grant them much weaker deontological constraints. Importantly, though it is not the case that people have no deontological constraints for animals whatsoever. This differ- ence in degree, however, can be very substantial, and most people consider it fairly wrong to harm humans while fairly permissible to harm animals for the greater good. Animals Are Seen Neither as Objects Nor as Persons Our findings support Nozick’s (1974) suggestion that people place animals into a moral category between humans and objects. In some respects, animals are perceived as having a moral status similar to that of inanimate objects: Like objects, people consider it morally permissible to own animals, to treat them as a tool for another’s purpose, to deny them of their autonomy, or to treat them as interchangeable with other animals—properties that the philos- opher Martha Nussbaum (1995) has identified as aspects of ob- jectification. However, in contrast to objects, animals are seen as sentient beings that deserve some moral protection. For example, we found that people consider it permissible to destroy an object but not to harm an animal, if the sole purpose is to fulfil a personal preference. (The case of meat consumption appears to be an exception and might be related to people’s tendency to demental- ize farmed animals; see Bastian et al., 2012 ) The fact that deontological constraints for humans are much higher than those for animals is reflected by the fact that humans are seen as possessing inalienable rights, but such rights are rarely, if ever, ascribed to animals. Most people of Western societies are firm believers in basic human rights such as a right to life, bodily integrity, and autonomy—rights that are inalienable and absolute. Even humans without advanced cognitive capacity. such as human infants or cognitively severely disabled humans. are granted these same basic rights. Animals, in contrast, are not granted equivalent rights, not even the most basic ones. This is shown, for example, in the context of medical experimentation or exploitation for consumption. The strength of deontological protections people grant animals may predict how well they treat animals more generally. Histori- cally, moral attitudes toward animals have been changing ( Kelch, 2012 ;Pinker, 2012 ). In medieval Europe, for example, burning cats was considered a form of entertainment ( Benton, 1997 ). Today, most people are opposed to unnecessary cruelty to animals ( Vaughn et al., 2009 ). And since the 1970s, the animal rights movement has emerged, advocating not just for better treatment of animals but also for granting legal rights to animals ( Singer, 1975 ). In our studies, we found that people had much weaker constraints against harming animals than against harming humans. But they still (on average) granted animals at least some weak deontological protections. It is possible that a few centuries ago people would have granted animals even weaker deontological protections than today, and that in the future they will grant them even stronger ones. That being said, the deontological protections that people currently grant animals are not yet strong enough to make people view it wrong to harm animals in order to benefit humans. Limitations and Future Research We have identified multilevel weighted deontology as the model that best describes people’s intuitions about when it is permissible to harm humans and animals. Future research could explore the model further and make it more precise. Future research could look at a wider range of cross-species sacrifice cases as well as at mixed cases in which a group of individuals consisting of different species would have to be harmed or saved. We concluded that there are likely multiple factors that explain why aversion to harm animals is weaker than the aversion to harm humans, among them perceived suffering capacity, perceived cog- nitive capacity, and speciesism. However, our studies cannot rule out other underlying factors that we have not explicitly explored in our studies. For example, Piazza, Landy and Goodwin (2014) found that an animal’s harmfulness affects its perceived moral status. More generally, it is possible that factors related to an animal’s appearance and behavior affect its perceived moral status. Future research could also attempt to estimate the relative degree to which each factor contributes to the effect. In Study 10 we found evidence that species-membership can affect permissibility of harming a few to save many without being mediated by harm aversion. Future research could attempt to replicate this finding and explore this potential additional path in more depth. For example, it could be tested whether people grant humans special moral status simply in virtue of them being human, regardless of their capacities. While we currently consider it plausible that speciesism is indeed a driving factor— echoing an influential philosophical view ( Singer, 1975 )—it is possible that the effect can instead be explained by other factors that are typically associated with species-membership. Future research could investigate which factors make people conceptualize a being as an animal or as a human. For example, would people conceptualize a cognitively highly advanced chimpanzee still as an animal or, instead, as a person and thus, perhaps no longer as an animal? What if an animal closely resembled humans in appearance and aspects of behavior while lacking normal human cognitive capacity? An empirical investigation of these questions could give us a deeper understanding of the psychological mechanisms at play. Conclusion Bentham argued that what matters is whether a being suffers, not how smart it is, and utilitarians hold that we should maxi- mize utility— by saving the greater number—regardless of species-membership. Kant held that there are some things we must never do to other rational beings, even if these acts would maximize utility, and that humans therefore enjoy deontological protections from certain kinds of trade-offs. Nozick proposed a This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1037 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS way in which these two views might be combined: that Kant is right about humans, but Bentham is right about animals: “Util- itarianism for animals, Kantianism for people.” We found that neither of these views succeeds in capturing how most people think about harm to humans versus to animals. 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Cold or calculating? Reduced activity in the subgenual cingulate cortex reflects decreased emotional aversion to harming in counterintui- tive utilitarian judgment. Cognition, 126, 364 –372. http://dx.doi.org/10 .1016/j.cognition.2012.11.002 Williams, B. (2009). The human prejudice. Peter Singer Under Fire: The Moral Iconoclast Faces His Critics, 3, 77. Received July 8, 2019 Revision received August 6, 2020 Accepted August 20, 2020 This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly. 1039 HARMING ANIMALS AND HUMANS
Business Ethics And Social Responsibilities 2000 words Please read through all my requirement before accepting. Thanks.
Journal o f Media Ethics, 30:3-18, 2015 Copyright © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC ISSN: 2373-6992 print/2373-700X online DOI: 10.1080/08900523.2014.985295wRoutledge T a y lo r & Francis G r o u p The Ethics of Two-Way Symmetry and the Dilemmas of Dialogic Kantianism N i c h o la s B r o w n i n g The Media School, Indiana University J. E. Grunig’s (1992a) seminal work on excellence theory and subsequent works by other scholars advance the two-way symmetrical model as a best-practice approach to public relations (PR). In part, two-way symmetry is preferred because of an assertion that it is the most ethical form of practice. However, only within a means-based deontological framework do two-way symmetry and the principle of dialogue emerge as universally ethical. Taking an ends-based utilitarian standpoint makes the potential ethical flaws of two-way symmetry apparent. Issues of moral luck, hegemony, and the limitations of dialogue also pose problems for the moral primacy claims surrounding two- way symmetry. The analysis that follows points toward a need for a more relative and contingent approach to PR ethics, and by extension to PR practice itself. INTRODUCTION In promoting the ethical superiority o f the symmetrical model, excellence theorists argue that dialogic, two-way symmetrical practice is the normative ideal for public relations (PR) because it is the most effective and ethical of the four models (J. E. Grunig, 1989, 1992a, 2000, 2006; L. A. Grunig, J. E. Grunig, & Dozier, 2002). This approach has met with considerable criticism. Just as two-way symmetry has been argued to vary in efficacy across situations, it also varies in its level of ethicality (Cameron, 1997; Cameron, Pang, & Jin, 2008; Cancel, Cameron, Sallot, & Mitrook, 1997; Cancel, Mitrook, & Cameron, 1999; Leichty, 1997; Leichty & Springston, 1993; Murphy, 1991, 2000). The thrust o f the argument presented here is not that two-way symmetrical practice is unethical; rather, the argument is that two-way symmetry will not always emerge as the most ethical mode of practice across varying situations. The excellence proposition that two-way symmetrical public relations is always “more” ethical than other modes o f practices is simply untrue. While two-way symmetry may indeed be practiced ethically, so too can the other models (Wright, 2006). Manuscript submitted December 11, 2013; revision accepted August 28, 2014. Correspondence should be sent to Nicholas Browning, The Media School, Indiana University, Franklin Hall, 601 E. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN 47406. E-mail: [email protected] J ournalaf Excellence theory is right to account for ethics in devising models o f practice and to provide some standard on which to ju d g e practitioners. PR practitioners, as well as the organizations they represent, should consider ethical action critical if for no other reason than practicality: Ethical actions build needed trust between organizations and the publics they serve. Moreover, acting in a morally responsible manner limits government regulation and interference within a given industry, allowing the organizations that operate within that industry a greater degree of autonomy, which is oftentimes necessary for moral agents to make ethical decisions (Christians, 2007; Gower, 2006). Nevertheless, claims o f ethicality are often accepted prim a facie and w ithout proper eval­ uative depth. The aim of this article is to more fully examine the assertion that two-way symmetry is the most ethical form of public relations and to establish whether this dialogic model provides an applicable and needed ethical framework for PR practitioners. I will analyze ethical claims about two-way symmetry, explore key concepts o f the justice-based ethical paradigms o f utilitarianism and deontology, and compare findings to piece together a more complete picture o f the ethics o f two-way symmetry. As the reader will see, the ethical primacy claims of two-way symmetry hold under rigorous Kantian conceptions o f ethics, but taking a more consequentialist approach strongly questions the moral superiority o f this model. DEONTOLOGY AND THE CASE AGAINST UTILITARIANISM As Bowen (2004a) argues, “public relations needs to proceed from an ethical vantage, using a set o f decision-making guidelines that are well conceptualized, applicable across a variety o f situations, and defensible” (p. 75). The question then becomes one of determining which ethical framework— and, by extension, which conception o f PR practice— meets these needs. Arguably, the two most debated frameworks are deontology and utilitarianism. Deontological Ethics Deontology holds that the “rightness and wrongness o f acts are determined by the intrinsic quality o f the act itself or the kind o f act it is, not by its consequences” (Pojman, 2004, p. 295). Rather than directly seeking desirable consequences, deontologists argue that some acts are intrinsically good, and that goodness is an end in and of itself (Kant, 1785/1994; Bowen, 2005). For an act to possess intrinsic goodness, or what Kant referred to as “moral worth,” it must be done out of a sense o f duty and a respect for moral law. The reason for this stipulation is that one cannot evaluate the moral worth of acts done with selfish intent or acts that result in selfish benefits (Ross, 1930). Kant developed a policy for evaluating the intrinsic goodness o f an act: the categorical imperative.1 Essentially, the categorical imperative stipulates that an act that should not be practiced commonly should not be practiced at all; that in the quest for goodness, people must be respected for their full humanity and never only used to attain some higher goal; and that it is the responsibility o f each individual to promote moral ends. Because o f the importance of universalizing these principles, Kant’s (1785/1994) deontology is solidly absolutist. Ross (1930) presents a deontological approach similar to Kant’s in that each maintains that the rightness o f an action is intrinsic and duty-based; however, R oss’s system Journa lf oMleMdi aiEEJoti h o f prima facie duties provides more flexibility. W hile Ross clearly believes in the importance and application o f the categorical imperative, he argues that there are instances in which individuals should sometimes act against a maxim they would normally follow because other duties arguably take precedence. Thus established principles would provide useful guidelines that are nearly— but certainly not— universal. In R oss’s conception o f deontology, determining the rightness o f actions means considering contexts, situations, and, at least to some extent, consequences. Utilitarian Ethics Utilitarianism, on the other hand, focuses almost exclusively on consequences. John Stuart Mill (1863/2001), an early utilitarian thinker, argues that “all action is for the sake o f some end, and rules o f action [… ] must take their whole character and color from the end to which they are subservient” (p. 2). Here, M ill breaks noticeably from means-based ethics, believing that not all actions stem from an inherent or intrinsic sense of duty and thus cannot be judged as right or wrong based on such internal merits. Unfortunately, when reduced to the greatest-good-for-the-greatest-number maxim, utilitar­ ianism is conflated to mean an ethic that focuses only on the “numeric good,” that is, the promotion o f goods for the majority regardless o f the harms done to the minority. In actuality, Mill (1863/2001) argues for what Elliott (2007) refers to as the “aggregate good,” or “the overall good for the community as a whole, or for all o f the people who can be identified as being affected by a particular action” (p. 100, emphasis original). The goods and/or harms done to the minority must be regarded with equal interest as those done to the majority, the goal being to promote general social justice as opposed to primal, hedonistic pleasures (Elliott; Mill).2 Additionally, the argument o f uncertainty is often levied against utilitarianism because judgm ents about the morality o f the agent and the act are made retrospectively, limiting the action guidance the framework can provide (Williams, 1981/1993). Christians (2007) claims that utilitarians only anticipate future effects and that, as a result, “an ethics o f duty is a more compelling model of moral decision making” as “it covers the entire time frame [… ]” (p. 121) as opposed to relying on retrospection. This critique is subject to continuing debate. While anticipation o f future events is critically important to utilitarianism, judgm ents about future outcomes— and their level o f certainty in particular— are based at least on a priori past observations. Thus to some extent, the entire time frame is important to utilitarian ethics, though admittedly the future takes precedence. Also, Kantian deontology is arguably as time bound as utilitarianism, or perhaps even more so, the difference being that the focus is on past intent rather than future outcomes. Kant (1785/1994) considered consequences as externalities outside the bounds o f moral consideration. Deontology focuses less on the entire time frame and more on the past; that is, the intention that precedes action, when assessing morality. In my view, issues o f uncertainty are more or less equal problems for both frameworks, but for different reasons. The uncertainty of future events limits the action guidance o f utilitarianism while the uncertainty o f the deontological moral agent’s motives limits the ability o f observers to ju d g e the moral worth o f a given action. Others criticize utilitarianism because acting to achieve a greater good means moral agents must oftentimes abandon important personal goals; acting against perceived self-interest runs counter to utilitarian ideology. Utilitarians do not advocate abandoning self-interest so much J ournalaf as delaying it. From a quid pro quo understanding, one assumes that postponing one’s own rewards for the good of others will eventually lead to others delaying self-interested rewards to act in a manner that leads to some good being done for the original actor, just as the principle of fecundity would predict (Bentham, 1789/2004). However, as Ross (1930) argues, humans may not be wired to think consistently in such a coldly rational, utilitarian manner. As Williams (1973) puts it, making the moral choice from a utilitarian standpoint often requires that individuals act against their own integrity. Even if making the choice to commit a “moral evil” is for the best, people may not find themselves able to act in such a way. Because of this, oftentimes “utilitarianism alienates one from one’s moral feelings” (Williams, 1973, p. 258); this alienation from one’s own self does, to some degree, remove both the human and communal elements from moral decision making (Christians, 2007; Ross, 1930). It is difficult to pose a counterargument to the positions of Christians (2007), Ross (1930), and Williams (1973). There does appear to be something within people that, despite eluding precise definition, precludes individuals from acting out of pure utilitarian rationality. Utilitarianism provides a useful framework for understanding and applying ethics, but it is incomplete in its understanding of the human psyche. DEONTOLOGY, TWO-WAY SYMMETRY, AND FLAWS OF PRACTICE Theorists promoting the inherent ethicality of two-way symmetry must operate as though consequences were separated completely from intentionality in the ethical judgments of actions. The distinction between symmetry and asymmetry is at the heart of the claims of two-way symmetry’s moral superiority to the other models: The two-way asymmetrical model is two-way and asymmetrical and can be practiced either ethically or unethically and through either mediated or interpersonal communication. The two-way symmetri­ cal model is two-way, symmetrical, and nearly always ethical; it can be implemented through either mediated or interpersonal communication. (L. A. Gmnig et al., 2002, p. 350, emphasis original) From these definitions, two things are readily apparent. First, excellence theorists claim two- way symmetry is ethically superior because it is almost always ethical as opposed to being ethical only sometimes. Second, the only distinction between these two models is the level of symmetry. Therefore, the ethical superiority of two-way symmetry must be rooted in the process of symmetry, the intention for dialogic communication, and the means through which dialogue is achieved. Excellence theorists have long advocated for the downplaying of outcomes in making moral judgments of the four models’ ethical values, which in turn helps solidify two-way symmetry as the normative, moral ideal. In Excellence in Public Relations, for example, J. E. Grunig and White (1992) argue: Asymmetrical public relations can be ethical if its practitioners can show that the consequences of their behavior do not harm people. [ . . . ] We believe, in contrast, that public relations should be based on a [symmetrical] worldview that incorporates ethics into the process of public relations rather than on a view that debates the ethics of its outcomes, (p. 57, emphasis added) Journa l f oMleMdi aiE E Joti 7 Note, however, that similar consequences can result from dissimilar actions; for instance, both asymmetrical and symmetrical tactics could yield the same ethical ends w ith dissimilar motivations at the onset. Commonly suggested corporate social responsibility (CSR) motivations provide excellent examples. Much o f the CSR literature divides CSR motives into two broad types: normative and instrumental (Aguinis & Glavas, 2012; Hartman, Rubin, & Dhanda, 2007; Neville, Bell, & Mengiitj, 2005; Peloza & Shang, 2011; Raghubir, Roberts, Lemon, & Winer, 2010; Reeves & Ferguson-DeThome, 1980). Homburg, Stierl, and Bomemann (2013) differentiate the two views as follows: • “The nonnative approach proposes an examination o f firm-stakeholder relationships to discern stakeholders’ interests and offer guidance on how to account for them using moral or philosophical principles.” (p. 56, emphasis original) • “The instrumental approach proposes an examination o f firm-stakeholder relationships to discern stakeholders’ interests. However, in contrast to the normative approach, the instrumental approach involves the organizational performance consequences that stem from accounting for these interests.” (p. 56, emphasis original) While symmetrical and asymmetrical communication both address bottom-line concerns, the dialogic collaboration inherent in the normative approach is more indicative o f symmetry. The instrumental approach is more asymmetrical in that it relies on established relationships and feedback loops, with the organization being the primary benefactor of information exchange. However, regardless o f the motivation, once implemented the CSR initiatives will produce equivalent social goods for targeted publics. If outcomes are used to judge the morality of such actions, asymmetry stands on equal ground w ith symmetry, thus nullifying any claim of intrinsic ethicality in symmetrical practices; however, in approaching ethics deontologically, the motivations and processes used to achieve those ends become the primary mode for ethical judgment, and symmetry could potentially emerge as morally superior. This need to focus exclusively on intent or process is ju s t one reason why the absolutist Kantian framework lies at the heart o f this critique. The other is that, in general, the literature promoting the ethical superiority o f two-way symmetry follows an absolutist deontological path, seeing the Kantian approach as most compatible with two-way symmetry. Bowen (2004a), for example, argues that using a deontological approach to PR ethics is sensible because o f the similarities between deontology and excellence theory: “Deontology is based on the moral autonomy o f the individual, similar to the autonomy and freedom from encroachment that public relations seeks to be considered excellent” (p. 70). L. A. Grunig and Toth (2006) also support a deontological approach because they view this standpoint as ethically superior to utilitarianism: In this increasingly diverse world, deontology makes more sense than utilitarianism for tw o main reasons. First, consequentialist ethics favors the majority over the minority; second, the effect of emphasizing consequences is the tendency to treat people as means, rather than valuing them in and o f themselves, (p. 51) The most prominent reason for choosing a deontological paradigm, however, appears to be that it provides a goodness o f fit, enabling its proponents to uphold the stance o f ethical superiority for two-way symmetrical communication: J ournalaf That leaves the symmetrical model as the only approach that consistently passes the rigorous moral tests of Kantian philosophy. A symmetrical approach maintains the obligation of dialogue and respects the dignity of others by engaging them in discussion that is aimed at mutual understanding, rather than applying persuasion. Using the symmetrical model for purposes of mutual understanding and dialogue is consistent with [ . . . ] morally good intention required in deontological philosophy. (Bowen, 2007, pp. 285-286) Despite this deontological focus on means, “by its nature, answering the question, ‘what is ethically right?’ commands consideration of the consequences o f a decision, without requiring a decision to be dictated by those consequences” (Bowen, 2004a, p. 86). Even using a deonto­ logical framework, it appears impossible to eliminate the role o f consequences in determining ethicality, but Bowen (2004a) nevertheless attempts to minimize the role o f outcomes in moral decision making. Allowing for a prominent introduction o f consequences in evaluating morality poses a threat to the ethical primacy of two-way symmetry. The question o f whether two- way symmetrical communication is the most ethical PR strategy rests on the assumption that an absolutist Kantian deontology is always the best and most applicable method to evaluate ethicality. There is, however, considerable evidence to the contrary. A PRIMA FACIE ARGUMENT FOR A CONSEQUENT!ALIST OR MIXED PARADIGM A Brief Illustrative Example Consider the following example: A PR practitioner works for a children’s hospital that provides needed medical care to disabled children. Most o f the care the hospital provides is contingent upon receiving donations from the community, and a primary function o f this PR practitioner is fundraising. The hospital sponsors a local, weeklong circus within the community, which has typically been the chief fundraising event for the organization. Over the past three years, however, circus attendance has steadily declined, and there is a fear that this downward slump will continue. Should the hospital fail to reach its fundraising goals, it will be unable to adequately treat patients in need o f such unique care. Through considerable research, the PR practitioner has determined that, over the past several years, community awareness o f the circus has decreased as has media coverage leading up to the event. The practitioner feels that increasing media coverage o f the circus will increase community awareness, subsequent attendance, and funds raised. The circus opens to the general public on a Saturday; however, rehearsals o f all the acts take place for the three days preceding opening day. The PR practitioner invites several patients o f the hospital, all disabled children, to witness these rehearsals and participate in the circus activities. The practitioner also invites local media outlets to cover this exclusive event, which in turn yields several compelling images, both through video and photography, that the media use to construct stories about what the children’s hospital does for disabled children and how crucial the circus is as a fundraising event. As a result o f media exposure leading up to the event, the circus sees increased attendance and the hospital gains needed funds to treat disabled children— some of the very same children featured in these media stories. Journa lf oMleMdi aiEEJoti h Evaluating the Example From a utilitarian standpoint, this practitioner acted ethically. In no way were the children physically or emotionally harmed in participating in the media event; in fact, it is probable that they, like m ost children, simply enjoyed a trip to the circus. The media were also treated fairly and seized the opportunity to present a story o f community importance to their audiences. These messages were no doubt persuasive, emotional appeals, but no lies were constructed in advocating for greater circus attendance. Moreover, it is likely that attendees enjoyed the experience as well and felt good about aiding a worthy, charitable cause. The hospital also clearly benefited from the media event, as attendance— and more importantly revenue— increased. This in turn benefits the current and future patients o f that hospital as well as the PR practitioner, who developed a successful media relations campaign. From a Kantian standpoint, however, the practitioner acted immorally. First, we cannot determine whether the practitioner acted from a moral duty toward ensuring the well-being o f sick children or out of selfish motives; that is, the furthering of a career or the promotion o f her client. Because there is no way to determine whether the campaign was constructed out o f moral duty, this at best makes the practitioner’s actions morally questionable. There is also serious concern about whether the humanity formulation o f the categorical imperative was violated. What may be considered immoral here from a deontological standpoint is the use o f disabled children as a means to the organizational end o f raising funds for the hospital. It appears that the driving motivation was the use o f these children to gam er needed media coverage, which means that the full humanity of these persons may not have been given primacy. Although this case appears deontologically questionable, the layperson probably would not ju d g e the PR practitioner’s actions as immoral: Everybody seems to benefit and nobody appears to be harmed. Consider Ross’s (1930) point that sometimes consequences can shift the circumstances o f when a given maxim is ethical; this appears to be the case here. A Kantian approach causes one to label an otherwise moral— or potentially amoral— action immoral because it violates an abstract principle in the successful pursuit o f ethical consequences. Problem for Two-Way Symmetry Negating or even minimizing the effect o f consequences on ethical decision making is as equally illogical as expecting people to act from a coldly rational and emotionless stance of rigid utilitarianism, yet this is the Kantian model. Allowing for consequences to factor into ethical evaluations, which they do, means surrendering the inherent ethical premising o f two- way symmetry. Though any such claim of ethical superiority o f two-way symmetry should be considered suspect, there are reasons beyond the importance o f considering consequences as to why a deontological approach to public relations may actually be less ethical— and certainly less applicable— than an approach at least somewhat based on consequentialist ethics. A u to n o m y a n d m o ra l luck. Kantian deontology rests on the assumption that humans can and do act rationally as autonomous moral agents (Bowen, 2004a, 2004b, 2005, 2007; Kant, 1785/1994). In defining the law of autonomy, Sullivan (1989) states that “a moral agent is an agent who can act autonomously, that is, as a law unto him self or herself on the basis of objective maxims o f his or her reason alone” (p. 48). Bivins (2006), however, asserts that “the J o urnalflM ability to respond based entirely on self-motivation (or autonomy) is also limited by role and environment” (p. 23). As Bowen (2004a) points out, organizations must allow practitioners to act freely in order for them to act ethically— at least from a deontological standpoint— but it is unlikely that any organizational environment would allow for complete autonomy (Dozier & L. A. Grunig, 1992). Beyond the individual practitioner, PR departments often lack autonomy themselves as they may be subjugated to marketing, legal, media relations, or other communication departments (Bowen, 2005, 2008; Ehling, White, & J. E. Grunig, 1992; J. E. Grunig, 2006; J. E. Grunig & Repper, 1992; L. A. Grunig & Toth, 2006). It would seem then that, from a Kantian perspective, one failing to possess autonomy will always act unethically, as autonomy is a necessary condition for ethicality. To some extent, however, the degree to which a PR practitioner can act autonomously is a matter o f moral luck, as “a significant aspect o f what [she] does depends on factors beyond [her] control, yet we continue to treat [her] in that respect as an object o f moral judgm ent” (Nagel, 1979/1993, p. 59). Certainly a PR practitioner might have little say over the organizational culture and structure that dictates her level o f autonomy and thus her ability to act ethically. Because Kant does not account for moral luck in making ethical judgments, we are left to unfairly ju d g e many PR practitioners and indeed whole departments as acting unethically due to circumstances far beyond their control (Nagel; Williams, 1981/1993). Cultural specifics in symmetric practices. The Kantian deontological model o f ethical PR practice also lacks the universal nature any such approach would necessarily require. The practice o f the four models, including two-way symmetry, is bound by personal and cultural influence (L. A. Grunig et al., 2002). Bowen (2005), for example, stipulates that “organizations headquartered in countries without a Judeo-Christian ethical basis [… ] might find im ple­ menting the model difficult” (p. 211). But as Bowen (2005) herself stipulates, deontological principles fail the all-important categorical imperative if they cannot be universalized, and seeing as such a model is culturally specific, it cannot be universal, it fails the test o f the categorical imperative, and therefore becomes inapplicable. ETHICAL CONCERNS FOR DIALOGIC COMMUNICATIONS Hegemony From a Kantian, two-way symmetrical approach, the ethicality o f any action is grounded in duty-based intention as opposed to an action’s consequences. Intentions, unlike consequences, are unobservable and known only to the actor. From an observer’s point o f view, one must ask if two-way symmetrical practitioners act out of a moral, duty-based intention to promote social justice, or whether they use dialogue as a less socially scrutinized means o f controlling interpersonal communication (Roper, 2005; Stoker & Tusinski, 2006). Typically, when talking o f hegemony and the Grunigian models o f public relations, asym­ metrical tactics have been criticized. J. E. Grunig and White (1992) believe that “practitioners with an asymmetrical worldview presuppose that the organization knows best and that publics benefit from ‘cooperating’ with it” (p. 40). This paternalistic view, it is argued, then leads to hegemonic behavior on the part o f the organization. Journa lf oMleMdi aiEEJoti h h To J. E. Grunig and W hite’s (1992) point, their criticism is clearly one o f an asymmetrical worldview as opposed to one of asymmetrical practices, though that distinction is rather subtle. As compared to an asymmetric worldview, a symmetric worldview “should be ethical in that it helps organizations build caring— even loving— relationships with other individuals and groups they affect in a society or the world” (J. E. Grunig & White, p. 38, emphasis original). I do not wish to argue against the ethical presumption o f the symmetric worldview that building relationships can be a moral good both in terms of intent and outcome. Instead, I argue that the symmetric practice o f dialogue is not always a necessary— or even preferable— tactic to foster healthy, ethical relationships between organizations and their publics. First, let me clearly state that I am not suggesting that dialogue is never effective; rather, I agree with Stoker and Tusinski’s (2006) claim that communicative practices such as dissem­ ination, engagement, and reconciliation might often be more ethical and more effective than dialogue. According to Stoker and Tusinski, dialogue is naturally appealing to public relations because “in a profession beset by criticism for spinning the truth to portray bad news as good and good news as better than it is,” dialogic values of “equality, agreement, and mutual benefit” seem to provide much needed credibility and moral standing (p. 160). In practice, however, dialogue may not always live up to such lofty goals, and at times has dire, though unintended, ethical consequences. In two-way symmetric practice, dialogue should promote mutual understanding between publics by orienting them to one another through symmetric persuasion to get everyone on the same page, so to speak (Bivins, 2009; Bowen, 2007; J. E. Grunig, 1992a; L. A. Grunig et ah, 2002). The goal of this practice is to create mutual agreement on a course of action that benefits all publics involved, that is, to create a win-win scenario (J. E. Grunig, 1992a; L. A. Grunig et al., 2002). W hile excellence theory offers unwavering support for the process of dialogue, opponents— in particular contingency theorists— are concerned that dialogue may at times create morally reprehensible consequences, such as legitimizing “morally repugnant publics” (Cancel et al., 1997; Cancel et al., 1999; Leichty, 1997). In contrast to contingency theorists and in support o f dialogue, L. A. Grunig et al. (2002) argue that while “it may be unethical to accommodate a repugnant public; it is not unethical to talk with its representatives” (p. 315). Consider, however, that the goal of dialogue is to reach a mutually beneficial agreement. Certainly there must be times when oppositional publics cannot achieve such agreement, and in those cases dialogic communication would be a fruitless endeavor (Stoker & Tusinski, 2006). Additionally, in the case of a morally repugnant public, an organization might reasonably have no desire to reach mutual agreement with its representatives. Why, then, should speaking with those representatives be considered an ethical or effective action? Dialogue may at least be an effective choice in scenarios where mutual agreement is either unlikely or undesirable because in both instances it provides a hegemonic way to manage power relations in favor o f the organization. True dialogue requires equality between organizations and publics, but dialogic communication between organizations and publics is difficult to keep free and open to all affected parties (Stoker & Tusinski, 2006). According to Palenchar and Heath (2006), “such communication is likely to be disproportionately shaped by key players, industry, government, media, and activists” (p. 149). Only powerful groups and individuals engage in such dialogue, and because these groups and individuals can never represent any public in a complete sense, many affected parties are still left without a voice despite— and perhaps because of—the guise o f dialogue. J o urnalflM With these power differentials in place, the conditions are ripe for hegemony, but whether two-way symmetrical dialogue is hegemonic rests on the key question o f “whether the objective o f [two-way symmetric organizations’] relationship management is to maintain an environment that enables organizations to meet their own policy objectives or whether it entails a collabo­ rative negotiation o f policy objectives themselves” (Roper, 2005, p. 76). Both symmetric and asymmetric tactics are capable o f creating a type o f paternalism that could in turn lead to hegemony. However, concessional changes on the part o f an organization to appease a public— generally an accommodating symmetrical approach— could be a soft-power exercise in hegemony: It can be argued that the organizations that, from their dominant but challenged positions, make substantive changes to their practices, do so in order to maintain their existing hegemony. [ . . . ] Does this make them ‘excellent’ organizations? W hat they have attempted to do, in practice, is to make sufficient concession [sic] to deflect the more wide-reaching opposition. (Roper, 2005, p. 82) The two-way symmetric approach to social responsibility may be yet another example o f such hegemonic practices. Within this framework, social responsibility means that “organizations manage with an eye on the effects of their decisions on society as well as on the organization” (J. E. Grunig, 1992b, p. 17). The question is, then, to what end are these socially responsible efforts and subsequent concessions made?: Are they ‘ju s t enough’ to quiet public criticism, allowing essentially a business as usual strategy to remain in force? Are they allowing the continuing co-operation between business and govern­ ment, preventing the introduction o f unwelcome legislation— and what is the price? (Roper, 2005, p. 83) These scenarios also point to a clear advantage for pro-symmetry theorists in using a deon- tological approach: It allows for the ethical judgm ent o f actions to be based on unobservable intentions. The observer is left only with the consequences o f such actions, a dynamic that lends itself to potential hegemony. Organizations practice symmetrical public relations to illustrate social responsibility, but what are the benefits o f such a display? Socially responsible organizations act in such a manner because “ethical behavior helps corporations to enhance the bottom line” (L. A. Grunig, J. E. Grunig, & Ehling, 1992, p. 85). Even more problematic is that practicing dialogic, symmetrical communications to enhance the bottom-line contributions of CSR may lead to violations o f moral duties. Managing CSR often means managing conflicting demands among a wide array o f stakeholders (e.g., employees, shareholders, customers)— to all o f whom the organization has moral obligations (Benn, Todd, & Pendleton, 2010; Raghubir et al., 2010). Conflicting demands result in moral dilemmas because fulfilling one obligation violates another. Practicing social responsibility using the two-way symmetric model in order to be perceived as ethical and thus enhance the organization’s bottom line is not altruistic; it is manipulative, at least to an equal degree o f many asymmetric tactics. Such soft-power coercion that is sometimes, but not always, the result o f two-way symmetrical practice is also ju st as hegemonic as any asymmetric practice. Moreover, from the very Kantian standpoint many excellence theorists advance, practices o f “dialogic” audience research and social responsibility would be Journa lf oMleMdi aiEEJoti h c considered either amoral or immoral because they are not done out of duty but rather out of a desire to gain selfish benefits. Closing the Marketplace of Ideas The two-way symmetric coupling o f an infatuation with dialogue and a Kantian ethical per­ spective leads to other moral problems as well. In particular, focusing solely on intentionality as a point of ethical judgm ent places undue focus on dialogue, often at the expense o f fully comprehending the consequences o f such communicative acts. W hile dialogic communication may be aimed at exploring the marketplace o f ideas, the process of seeking agreement may in practice water it down. As Stoker and Tusinski (2006) point out, “all-out efforts to reach agreement may lead both parties to suppress differences rather than recognizing them and reconciling them” (p. 170). J. E. Grunig and White (1992) express skepticism about organizations that come to the negotiating table presupposing they know what is best for the publics they serve. The two-way symmetric solution to this worry is the preemptive use of dialogue to generate agreement. An a priori focus on generating dialogic agreement, however, leads to a critical failure: One never considers the possibility that the organization is right or that it does in f a c t know w hat is best f o r the public. The reverse may also be true: The opposing public may know what is best for the organization. In these instances, the organization— be it nonprofit, governmental, corporate, or otherwise— or public, with ample evidence suggesting the efficacy and ethicality of its position, should aggressively persuade the other party to cooperate with it. A focus on the process o f dialogue may create a spiral of silence effect that closes the door on healthy debate and in turn closes the marketplace o f ideas (Stoker & Tusinski). SYMMETRIC UTILITARIANISM? Only an absolutist deontological standard justifies a two-way symmetrical best-practice model because it allows its proponents to focus on differences between symmetric and asymmetric motives and processes as opposed to considering potential commonalities in outcomes.3 Prac­ titioners, however, cannot reach the Kantian moral standard consistently, probably because it is exceptionally high. Still, the choice to use a deontological approach is one largely motivated by convenience and goodness o f fit, as Bowen (2004a, 2004b, 2007) describes. But at other times, however, maintaining that two-way symmetry is the most ethical PR practice has been better accomplished by relying on a consequentialist approach, though that reliance has been extremely subtle. Not only is such a stance odd, it is also contradictory. To present asymmetric communication as paternalistic and hegemonic, and by extension advance an ethically favorable view o f two-way symmetry, J. E. Grunig (1989) argues the following: Although the asymmetrical perspective may sound like a reasonable position, keep in mind that organizations often expect publics to accept strange things as a result o f ‘cooperation’: pollution, toxic waste, drinking, smoking, guns, overthrow o f governments, dangerous products, lowered salary and benefits, discrimination against women and minorities, jobs, layoffs, dangerous man­ ufacturing plants, risky transportation o f products, higher prices, monopoly power, poor product J o urnalflM quality, political favoritism, use of poisonous chemicals, exposure to carcinogens, nuclear weapons, and even warfare. The list could go on and on. (p. 32) W h ile th is is u n d o u b ted ly true, asym m etrical practices have been used to cultivate non- acceptance o f m any o f the dangers on this laundry list o f negative outcom es and they have been m et w ith little criticism . A llo w in g fo r th e co n sid eratio n o f consequences a t any level negates th e in trin sic ethicality to w hich tw o-w ay sym m etry has laid claim . M oreover, the K antian m odel o f ab so lu tist d eontology is rid d le d w ith com plexities that p ro h ib it w idespread usefulness and applicability, particu larly w hen co u p led w ith the tw o-w ay sym m etric in sistence on using dialogue. B earing all th is in m ind, w e p lain ly see that it is im p o ssib le fo r a co m m unication tactic to be eth ically su p erio r to an o th er across all situations, cultures, and m om ents in time. There are clearly circum stances in w hich a tw o-w ay sym m etric approach based in dialogic c o m m u n icatio n w ill em erge as ethical. Still, it is im p o rtan t n o t to overstate th e frequency w ith w hich sym m etry w ill pro d u ce ethical in ten tio n s, actions, and outcom es. PR p ractitioners w o u ld better serve th e ir clients and key pu b lics by recognizing that no approach to PR practice is in h eren tly ethical. C h o o sin g to act in an asym m etric, less dialo g ically driven fash io n is o ftentim es the m ore ethical co urse o f action. VIRTUE ETHICS: A SUGGESTION FOR MOVING FOWARD M y aim here is n o t to su ggest that tw o-w ay sym m etrical p ractice is unethical, m erely that it is not always ethical. To th a t end I have elab o rated on several concerns I see w ith excellence th e o ry ’s co n sisten t reliance on dialo g u e and K antian deo n to lo g y as a m ark o f ethicality. A s a d iam etrically oppo sitio n al ethical theory (see B ow en, 2004a), utilitarian ism has been useful in h ig h lig h tin g these concerns in term s o f direct com parison. However, j u s t as rig id deo n to lo g y is flawed, so too is un tem p ered consequentialism , and m any o f th e above critiques o f u tilita ria n ism b ear th is o u t (see C hristians, 2007). W hile th ere is certainly ro o m fo r d ebate about and extension o f deo n to lo g ical and utilitarian ethics in p u b lic relations, I co ntend that it is m ore productive to pu rsu e the relatively unexplored th ird p ath o f v irtu e ethics. A focus on v irtu e m ig h t allow us to bypass o ld and, to som e degree, tireso m e argum ents betw een the m erits o f in ten tio n and u tility and in turn expound upon fresher ideas. A s o p posed to the deo n to lo g ical fixation on unobservable, p rio r in te n tio n and th e u tilitarian forw ard -lo o k in g tow ard uncertain, fu ture consequences, v irtu e ethics focuses on th e certain and observable m oral agent acting in th e present. M o re specifically, v irtu e ethics concerns its e lf w ith the developm ent o f v irtu o u s charac­ ter th ro u g h h abitual m oral action (A risto tle 340 B .C .E ./1999). The developm ent o f virtuous character should be p articularly im p o rtan t to PR p ractitioners as p u b lic relatio n s brands itse lf as m anaging a distin ct but sim ilar concept: rep u tatio n (B rpnn, 2013; D iStaso, 2012; K im & Yang, 2013). R ep u tatio n has been the currency o f p u b lic relations fo r som e tim e, and p o p u la r q uantitative m easurem ents o f the construct, such as C oom bs and H o lla d a y ’s (1996) organizational rep u tatio n scale, have th e ir ro o ts in m easures o f A ristotlean co n structs o f ethos and character (see M cCroskey, 1966). Journa lf oMleMdi aiEEJoti hc Beyond the goodness o f fit between virtuous character and the importance o f reputation to public relations, virtue ethics’ focus on the agent also aligns well with PR goals and practices. PR practitioners are valued for their ability to forge key relationships with important internal and external organizational stakeholders. W hile the effects o f organizational actions on stakeholders are important, the consideration o f stakeholders is consistently based in their relationship with and effect on the organization; little attention is paid to stakeholders’ relationships with and effect on one another outside potential consequences for the organization (see Freeman, 1984/2010). The organization, or agent, remains the central point of concern. This is also true of virtue ethics, as by definition “virtues [must] benefit their possessor” (Hursthouse, 1999, p. 123). The cultivation o f virtue is not, however, hedonistic, though it is marked in some degree by enlightened self-interest. The virtues (e.g., wisdom, justice, courage) operate as guiding rules for action, not unlike Kant’s (1785/1994) categorical imperative, which ensure beneficial behavior. Unlike deontology, however, virtue ethics embraces self-interest: The goal is for the agent to achieve its own well-being, which it can only do by acting from virtue. Moreover, virtue ethics is not strictly bounded by requirements for autonomy. Hursthouse (1999) contends that agents differ in their level o f virtue, and rather than seeing deference to others as a sign of weakness, she believes it to be a key forward stride in moral development: Indeed, most, if not all, of us have an imperfect grasp of these ‘sorts’ [of virtuous actions], which is why we should sometimes seek advice over dilemmas, sometimes take heed when people we respect for their wisdom disagree with us about what we are proposing to do or have done, and sometimes simply defer to their judgement [sic] at least pro tem and try to acquire their understanding of things in a particular area. (p. 61) Reliance on more virtuous others helps us become more virtuous ourselves. The same could be said of organizations, and public relations’ pursuit o f best practices in crisis communication, CSR, and a variety o f other sub-disciplines fits nicely into this ethical mold. Additionally, PR practitioners and PR departments often lack autonomy as matter o f moral luck (see Bowen, 2004a, 2007), so relying on an ethical perspective capable o f working around such restrictions should appeal to PR ethicists. While the potential for virtue ethics to inform PR theory and practice stems much further, to explore the connection any deeper extends well beyond the scope o f this paper. Nevertheless it certainly merits more thorough investigation, especially as arguments o f intention and utility as guiding principles for public relations begin to approach a relative stalemate. NOTES 1. At its root, the categorical imperative has three formulations: 1) The Universal Law Formulation: “Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law” (Kant, 1785/1994, p. 30). 2) The H umanity Formulation’. “Act in such a way that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in the person o f another, always at the same time as an end and never simply as a means” (Kant, 1785/1994, p. 36). Jo BROWNING 3) The Kingdom o f Ends Formulation: “Every rational being must so act as i f he were through his maxim always a legislating member in the universal kingdom o f ends” (Kant, 1785/1994, p. 43). 2. Bentham’s (178 9 /2 0 0 4 ) hedonic calculus also provides evidence to utilitarianism’s con­ siderations o f more than just numbers. 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Copyright ofJournal ofMedia Ethicsisthe property ofTaylor &Francis Ltdand itscontent may notbecopied oremailed tomultiple sitesorposted toalistserv without thecopyright holder’s expresswrittenpermission. However,usersmayprint, download, oremail articles for individual use.

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