If a lion could speak, would it say "I'm a serial killer"? ADVERTISEMENT [The Review Logo]( Did someone forward you this newsletter? [Sign up free]( to receive your own copy. You can now read The Chronicle on [Flipboard]( and [Google News](. âThe lion shall lie down with the lamb.â Almost everyone will recognize this fragment of Isaiah, actually an alliteratively condensed misquotation of the King James translation, which runs, âThe wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the lion shall lie down with the kid.â For many Christians, the words of the Hebrew prophet are taken to refer, with whatever degree of figurativeness, to the first and eventually the second coming of Christ. Isaiahâs allegorical fantasy of a world without carnivores has been taken up by some moral philosophers concerned with what they see as the moral problem of predation in the animal kingdom. Oxfordâs Jeff McMahan, for instance, ranks Isaiah first among âimportant religious thinkers who have found fault with the arrangement whereby a large proportion of sensitive beings are able to survive only by feeding upon others ⦠some of these thinkers have entertained visions of a better order.â The business of McMahan and others in his tradition is to convert these poetic and mystical evocations of a âbetter orderâ into a rational program. I had been vaguely aware that ideas like this existed, but I had assumed they were pretty fringe. So I was surprised to discover Martha Nussbaum endorsing them in her most recent New York Review of Books [essay](. (I was simply ignorant; in fact, Nussbaum has been writing about the moral problem of predation since 2006.) Nussbaum combines a version of McMahanâs position with an insistence that human interference in nature is so powerful and comprehensive that thereâs no such thing as âthe wildâ anyway â any concern with the intrinsic value of wilderness ecologies, she suggests, is just a mystification inherited from the Romantics. For Nussbaum, humansâ aesthetic glorification of animal predators reinforces unfortunate proclivities. âToo many people,â she writes, âgrow up excited and enthralled by predation, and this has had a bad effect on our entire culture.â She describes going on safari in Botswana, where she finds her fellow tourists wanting in moral sensitivity: âOne of the most eagerly sought-after sights was that of a rare species of wild dog leaping in a pack upon an antelope and tearing that animal limb from limb even before it was dead.â Of the ârich touristsâ she shared a jeep with, âit was a rare one or two who reacted with horror and aversion.â Interest in such spectacles, Nussbaum says, is evidence of the âunsavory sadistic tendenciesâ to which the human race is subject. SPONSOR CONTENT | Alliance for Early Success [Philanthropy Is Increasingly Betting on Policy Advocacy in the Early Childhood Years]( This somewhat sentimental vocabulary lurches into lurid melodrama when Nussbaum likens animal predation to crimes in the human world: âTo say that it is the destiny of antelopes to be torn apart by predators is like saying that it is the destiny of women to be raped.â Such rhetoric strikes me as in tension with what I take to be the utilitarian calculus underlying Nussbaumâs major argument. But other, more rigorous proponents of the moral exigency of the suffering of prey animals lapse into it too. âViewed from a distance,â McMahan writes in â[The Moral Problem of Predation]( which as far as I can discover is the most systematic defense of a strong interventionist position, âthe natural world may present a vista of sublime, majestic placidity. Yet beneath the foliage and concealed from the distant eye, a continuous massacre is occurring.â (Darwin said it first, and better: âWe behold the face of nature bright with gladness, we often see superabundance of food; we do not see or we forget that the birds which are idly singing round us mostly live on insects or seeds, and are thus constantly destroying life; or we forget how largely these songsters, or their eggs, or their nestlings, are destroyed by birds and beasts of prey â¦") William MacAskill, famous as a proponent of [effective altruism]( is even more gothic than Nussbaum and McMahan â in an essay co-written with Amanda MacAskill, he [compares]( lions to human serial killers and suggests that their extirpation is no less justified. Unlike Nussbaum, who tends to emphasize human sadism, McMahan focuses on human pity toward prey species: âThere is some intuitive support for the idea that there is a moral reason to intervene against predation. If one were to happen upon a young animal that was about to be captured and slowly devoured alive, piece by piece, by a predator, oneâs impulse would be to frighten off the predator, if possible.â And he is much less circumspect than Nussbaum about the moral duty to intervene in nature to eliminate predation and thereby reduce the sum total of suffering. On this topic, he permits himself flights of utopian (or dystopian) science-fictional fancy: There are two ways in which the incidence of predation could be significantly reduced, perhaps eventually to none. One is to bring about the gradual extinction of some or all predatory species, preferably through sterilization, and with the exception of the human species, which is capable of voluntarily ending its predatory behavior. The other, which is not yet technically possible, is to introduce germ-line (that is, heritable) genetic modifications into existing carnivorous species so that their progeny would gradually evolve into herbivores, in fulfillment of Isaiahâs prophecy. McMahan acknowledges that, given present limitations to both genetic intervention and our knowledge of ecological systems, this brave new world is not yet feasible. But he sees reason for hope; after all, science often advances much faster than expected, and in unpredictable ways: âWhat may now seem forever impossible may yield to the advance of science in a surprisingly short time â as happened when Rutherford, the first scientist to split the atom, announced in 1933 that anyone who claimed that atomic fission could be a source of power was talking âmoonshine.ââ (I am not sure the example proves just what he wants it to.) Naturalists are so far immune to these arguments; in fact, the reintroduction of predator species to areas where humans had driven them out is a priority of many ecologists. Daniel Blumstein, an ecologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of California at Los Angeles who studies predator-prey dynamics, told me that although he considers it important to minimize animal predation when it is caused by human activity â for instance, when domestic cats decimate bird populations â he doesnât think ânatural predation justifies interventions to eliminate predation in nature.â As McMahan himself acknowledges, the moral intuition of almost all regular people strongly rejects the sort of intervention he advocates. For now, [the heaven of the animals]( is a philosopherâs dream. Read Martha Nussbaumâs â[A Peopled Wilderness]( and Jeff McMahanâs â[The Moral Problem of Predation]( ADVERTISEMENT REGISTER NOW [Join us January 9-27]( for a virtual professional development program on overcoming the challenges of the department chair role and creating a strategic vision for individual and departmental growth. [Reserve your spot today!]( The Latest THE REVIEW | OPINION [Most of All, I Am Offended as a Muslim]( By Amna Khalid [STORY IMAGE]( On Hamline Universityâs shocking imposition of narrow religious orthodoxy in the classroom. ADVERTISEMENT THE REVIEW | ESSAY [Against the Writing Center]( By Blake Smith [STORY IMAGE]( Teaching composition shouldnât require so much jargony pseudoscience. THE REVIEW | ESSAY [The End of the Star System]( By Katie Kadue [STORY IMAGE]( At the English Institute, long a citadel of prestige, our correspondent finds egalitarianism in the face of collapse. THE REVIEW | ESSAY [The Terrible Tedium of âLearning Outcomesâ]( By Gayle Greene [STORY IMAGE]( Accreditorsâ box-checking and baroque language have taken over the university. THE REVIEW | REPORTING [Younger Faculty Are Leaning Out. Is That a Bad Thing?]( By Joshua Doležal [STORY IMAGE]( The debate over work boundaries rolls through higher ed. Recommended - âIt is undignified to play the fool in the name of ideological loyalty.â In Liberties, Celeste Marcus on [lâaffaire Joshua Katz]( and âwhat we can know and how we can know it.â
- âThe cadaver on the bed is labeled âfigurative paintingâ and the men around him, cutting him up, are members of the art establishment that promoted abstraction in the 1950s.â For NPR, Matthew Schuerman [on the painter]( Jonah Kinigstein, who will turn 100 in March.
- âLaschâs polemical works of social criticism have a dramatic quality of plunging us into (and back into) crises we didnât know we were experiencing but immediately recognize.â In Jacobin, Christian Lorentzen [on the enduring power]( of Christopher Lasch. Write to me at len.gutkin@chronicle.com. Yours, Len Gutkin SPONSOR CONTENT | New Jersey Institute of Technology [New Jersey Institute of Technology President Teik Lim Offers his Vision]( Leaning into NJITâs vibrant community of learners and scholars and the institutionâs record of delivering social and economic impact, President Lim has set forth a vision for NJIT that builds upon its current strengths. FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [The Future of Advising - Buy Now]( [The Future of Advising]( Good advising is widely seen as central to student success, but it is one of the most misunderstood and under-supported divisions on campus. [Order your copy]( to learn how university leaders can set advising up for success and create strategies for student success. NEWSLETTER FEEDBACK [Please let us know what you thought of today's newsletter in this three-question survey](. This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Read this newsletter on the web](. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2023 [The Chronicle of Higher Education](
1255 23rd Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037