Mercy – a Central Virtue in Animal Ethics

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Abstract

In ethical debates regarding modern technologies in livestock production, virtue ethics plays a subordinate role. We address this issue by providing a virtue ethical framework centered on mercy. First, we define mercy as a virtue, which applies when the moral agent can harm someone vulnerable and refrains from doing so. Second, we link mercy to empathic concern, which we argue to be crucial for virtue because it informs moral agents about pain in others and inhibits them from harming others. Drawing on an existing argument from military ethics about the viciousness of unlearning empathy in the case of soldiers learning to kill, we problematize animal slaughter. Third, we argue that a virtuous society promotes eudaimonia in its citizens and therefore should not require them to become merciless. We conclude that societies should not endorse practices that cultivate mercilessness, but encourage practices that increase mercy towards others, including farmed animals.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)281–303
Number of pages23
JournalJournal of Applied Animal Ethics Research
Volume7
Issue number2
Early online date2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Leon Borgdorf et al.

Keywords

  • animal ethics
  • empathy
  • killing inhibitions
  • mercy
  • violence inhibitions
  • virtue ethics

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