May
19
How to Live an Authentic Life
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Authenticity is something that we seem to value a great deal, but without much understanding of what it is. “Authentic Southern Barbeque,” “Authentic Amish-Style Handicrafts,” and “Authentically Italian” are just some of the puzzling uses of this apparently diverse term. But what does it mean, and why do we care so much about it? And how exactly can we go about living an authentic life?
Authenticity is an indicator of genuineness, honesty, and sincerity. This is difficult to understand in the case of things like barbeque sauce, however. “Authentic Southern Barbeque” refers to some kind of ideal of barbeque in the South, which any barbeque joint wearing this label must be reasonably close to achieving if it is to truly meet the standard of authenticity.
Human authenticity, unlike barbeque sauce, has been widely studied by existentialist philosophers, especially Martin Heidegger. Heidegger believed that to live authentically is, roughly, to live the life you want to live, unencumbered by the wants and wishes of others, or society itself. The authentic person is a real, live human being who is self-made in his or her own best image. Not in the sense of a Horatio Alger myth, but rather in that they are making their own choices, consciously, of who they want to be.
Perhaps the analogy between authentic human living and authentic Southern barbeque is not that far apart. In both cases, we want something that is genuine, sincere, and honest, not fabricated to seem like something that it is not. Whether it is barbeque sauce or humans, the desirability of this ideal makes a lot of sense.
It is in achieving this particular goal that our barbeque analogy breaks down. While authentic Southern barbeque simply means buying the right ingredients and having the right recipes and techniques, being an authentic human being is somewhat different. This requires that we are first aware of the way in which social, biological, and psychological conditions are shaping our being, and that we make a conscious effort to figure out what direction we want our lives to take, regardless of what any of these conditions might have to say about it. This is massively difficult, but incredibly important to human fulfillment.
This is important for our purposes because it seems that living an authentic life requires that we live mindfully. Self-awareness is an essential part of achieving this ideal of authenticity, and we cannot do one without the other. More to the point, living authentically is an essential part of living a happy and fulfilling life. We cannot find true happiness if we are at the mercy of our conditioning, because human beings crave meaningful choices. This is the core of why it is desirable to know how to live an authentic life. Until we begin to do this, none of our choices is truly meaningful in the way that we want them to be.
May
18
Ethical Animal Treatment - My Cat is Smarter Than Your Baby
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Modern society has a somewhat puzzling view concerning treatment of animals. Pet animals are seen as de facto members of our families, yet the very same animals are also used for research, product testing, and agriculture. Most people spend very little time thinking about the reasons for the relationship that humans have with animals, and it is often simply assumed that our tendency to exploit animals is justified in some way. However, careful consideration of reasons for the view that we hold about ethical animal treatment makes the obvious appropriateness of this relationship far less clear.
Religious arguments notwithstanding, most reasons for why exploitative (un) ethical treatment of animals is justified centers around some claim of superior intelligence. However, in addition to studying philosophical arguments that deny the moral significance of this difference, I recently had a rather telling series of experiences which illustrates the trouble with justifying harm on the basis of greater intelligence. In short, I learned that my cat is actually smarter than your baby.
The first part of this realization came while I was sitting with my wife, watching a group of children in a playground. A young child, no older than 18 months, was playing with a football. More accurately, he was dropping, carrying, and picking up the football in a manner that looked pretty boring, but that he found enthralling. At one point, his football rolled under a slide, just out of his immediate reach. He went through a series of attempts to grab it, including leaning forward and bashing his head on the slide, kneeling and resting his head against the slide that still blocked his reach, and finally realizing that crawling would allow him to get the football back.
This seemed to be a rather obvious example of rudimentary problem solving, and the difficulties that this young child displayed was something of an indicator of his knowledge and intelligence. Later that evening, under similar conditions, I watched my cat attempt to get a toy that was stuck under our coffee table. Unlike the toddler, my cat was quickly able to figure out exactly how to get the toy. He moved deliberately from one side of the table to the other, and there was an apparent purpose to his movement. He did not appear to be simply trying different strategies, as the toddler did, but examining the situation and making moves to achieve his goal.
The trouble here, is that if I want to claim that superior human intelligence makes it okay to treat animals badly, it seems that I can construct the same argument for treating a baby better than my cat. If being smarter means I must place greater limits upon how I treat you, and my cat is smarter than your baby, there are things I can do to your baby that I can’t do to my cat.
Hopefully this conclusion causes some raised eyebrows, and we might be wise to conclude that intelligence is not a good measure of moral considerability. If we choose not to give this up, we must support the conclusion that my cat has greater moral significance than your baby. It does not really matter what you choose to do, but you cannot hold that we can exploit animals because we are smarter than them, and also claim that the baby is of greater moral significance than my cat. In this light, ethical animal treatment deserves another look.
This type of tactic is helpful in explicating exactly what our moral reasoning leads us to. It is also a telling illustration of the world-as-teacher that is central to everyday ethics. While our socially supported beliefs and unexamined notions of morality claim that it is okay to treat animals as means to our ends because we are smarter than them, the world has other ideas in mind. By watching, listening, and pondering, we can move beyond our flawed moral conceptions and develop a greater understanding of what moral beliefs truly make sense.