2019
DOI: 10.1080/00048402.2018.1564777
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The Diner’s Defence: Producers, Consumers, and the Benefits of Existence

Abstract: One popular defence of moral omnivorism appeals to facts about the indirectness of the diner's causal relationship to the suffering of farmed animals. Another appeals to the claim that farmed animals would not exist but for our farming practices. The import of these claims, I argue, has been misunderstood, and the standard arguments grounded in them fail. In this paper, I develop a better argument in defence of eating meat which combines resources from both of these strategies, together with principles of popu… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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