Animals: ¿more than moral patients? On the status of moral patient in inter-species friendship
Abstract
In the canon of animal ethics, non-human animals have been conceived as moral
patients. For the allocation of said status (and the conceptualization of it) the capabilities
that the animal individual has as a principle have been taken. Among these, the most
important - and which differentiates the moral patient from the moral agent - is the
ability or not to take responsibility for one's own actions (moral responsibility).
However, the approach that supports such a perspective (property approach) can leave
aside certain relationships that have moral value in themselves for human beings, such
as friendship with some domesticated animals.
This text explores, initially, the concept of moral patient. This with the aim of
understanding what is at stake in the awarding of said status to non-human animals. In a
second moment, it explores the possibility of friendship with domesticated animals, as
well as the particularities of said relationship. Finally, it explores how moral
responsibility takes on certain unique characteristics in this relationship, which deviate
from the way it has been commonly conceptualized. This exploration is carried out
through the relationship approach, more precisely feminist ethics and care ethics.
Such exploration results in the insufficiency of the status of moral patient for the
understanding of the type of agency that the domesticated animal has in the relationship
of friendship with human beings. This invites us to rethink the way in which we have
conceptualized moral statuses and the way in which moral responsibility in them has
been conceived.