Abstract
Many philosophers endorse utilitarian arguments against eating meat
along the lines of Peter Singer’s, while others endorse deontological
arguments along the lines of Tom Regan’s. This chapter suggests that
both types of arguments are too quick. Empirical reasons are outlined
for thinking that when one eats meat, that doesn’t make a difference to
animals in the way that it would have to for either type of argument to
be sound—and this chapter argues that this is true notwithstanding
recent “expected utility” arguments to the contrary. The chapter then
identifies a general puzzle: given that almost everything we do in
modern society has some footprint of harm, how does one properly
distinguish acts that are permissible among these from those that are
not? The chapter explains why this is more difficult than it may initially
appear, and it proposes a solution.