First there were “animal rights.” Now, the next logical step is being taken by increasingly mainstream environmental radicals. Watch out: Here come “nature rights.”
Doubt anyone would pass laws actually giving “rights” to “nature?” They are already being enacted: New Zealand has granted the Whanganui River the rights of “personhood,” declaring it to be an “integrated, living whole” possessing “rights and interests”; Switzerland has placed a clause in its constitution recognizing the “dignity of creation,” including individual plants; and nearly 30 U.S. municipalities have adopted ordinances recognizing the purported “rights of nature,” including Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Santa Monica, California. Leftist governments in Bolivia and Ecuador have enshrined nature rights in their national constitutions, and a similar proposal was offered for inclusion in the draft United Nations global warming treaty.
Just what are the purported rights of nature? Promoted most prominently by the Community Environment Legal Defense Fund, the laws center around “the rights of people, natural communities, and ecosystems to exist, regenerate and flourish”—in essence, a “right to life for nature.” When these rights are deemed to come into conflict with human activities, nature must be given equal consideration. If there is no other way to mediate them, the disputes will go to court with environmentalists acting as nature’s “guardians.” Nature rights laws often allow any citizen to sue on behalf of nature, allowing unending litigation intended to throttle development projects before they ever get off the drawing boards.
Of greater philosophical concern, the nature rights ideology subverts what I call human exceptionalism by elevating the natural world to moral equality with human beings—effectively diminishing us to merely another animal in the forest. Such a reductionist self-perception alone could cause great harm. But by asserting that flora and fauna—perhaps even geysers and other geographical phenomena—have “rights,” the movement degrades liberal principles arising from the “Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” in the same way that wild inflation devalues the worth of currency. Indeed, if a squirrel or mushroom and all other earthly entities somehow possess rights, the very concept withers.
Beyond that, granting rights to nature is intellectually nonsensical. “Rights” can only be understood in the human context. University of Michigan professor of philosophy Carl Cohen put it this way: “A right . . . is a valid claim, or potential claim, that may be made by a moral agent, under principles that govern both the claimant and the target of the claim.” Since only humans are moral agents, only humans are capable of possessing rights.
David S. Oderberg, a philosophy professor at the University of Reading, describes this two-way street concept somewhat differently:
What matters in the having of rights is twofold: a) knowledge; b) freedom. More precisely, a right holder must first know that he is pursuing a good, and secondly, must be free to do so. No one can be under a duty to respect another’s right if he cannot know what it is he is supposed to respect.
This means that for nature to possess rights, it must also be capable of assuming concomitant duties or responsibilities toward others. Thus, if the rights of nature to “exist, regenerate, and flourish” can be enforced against us, we would have to be able to make the same claim against nature, a farcical notion.
What’s more, nature rights are unnecessary if we recognize our solemn duty to properly manage the environment through well-crafted use-management techniques and the application of conservation principles. For example, we impose very stringent and effective protections against human development within our national parks, such as Yellowstone, without giving rights to Old Faithful.
Some may accuse me of taking the whole thing too seriously. After all, part of what is going on is a filling-of-the-void resulting from the abandonment of faith in the increasingly secularized West. People should be free to believe what they want, of course. But when embodied into law, these tendencies can threaten human flourishing.
Thus, the controversy isn’t really about “rights” at all. Rather, we are having an important debate about the scope, nature, and extent of our responsibilities toward the natural world in the context of the human drive to thrive. These obligations to “the other,” it is important to add, are predicated solely on our being human. In this sense, the nature rights controversy and the willingness of some to sacrifice our own welfare to “save the planet” is ironic evidence of the very human exceptionalism that growing numbers of environmental advocates reject.
Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism. He also consults for the Patients Rights Council and the Center for Bioethics and Culture. His previous “On the Square” articles can be found here.
RESOURCES
“New Zealand Grants a River the Rights of Personhood,” Care2.Com
[Swiss] Federal Ethics Committee on Non-Human Biotechnology, The Dignity of Living Beings with Regard to Plants [PDF]
Community Environment Legal Defense Fund Web Site
CELDF “Rights of Nature” FAQs
Carl Cohen and Tom Regan, chapter by Carl Cohen, “Rights and Interests,” The Animal Rights Debate, (Latham, Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2001), p. 17
David S. Oderberg, “The Illusion of Animal Rights,” Human Life Review, Spring-Summer 2000, p. 42.
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Comments:
Of course, they do no such thing (for which we all can be eternally grateful for their logical inconsistency). Which makes me suspect that they may not really believe in this basis for rights.
Of course, please don't take my word on this logical inconsistency. Simon Blackburn, in his wonderful, and highly respected, DICTIONARY OF PHILOSOPHY (OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1996), has pointed this out.
I suspect that Wesley does not believe in animal rights, because he believes that it will have horrendous consequences for humans. This, as well, is not based on sound reasoning. If this reasoning possessed validity, one would infer that the more protection we give animals, one would see a corresponding reduction in how humans treat each other. We don't. In fact, just the opposite. Both humans, and animals, have never had it better. I suspect that, if animals are granted rights, human rights will not be adversely affected. After all, the same reasoning that convinces one thart humans have rights, convinces one that animals do as well.
Certainly Wesley Smith is correct that nature has no rights. Only conscious and eventual conscious beings have rights. Only they have interests, rocks, trees, and bacteria, have no consciousness, and no interests, therefore no rights.
The real reason the apparent contradiction emerges is that Mr. Smith, and those who share his views, are trying to buttress human uniqueness using *reason* rather than *revelation*. The only reason I can see to affirm that humans are unique (which I DO affirm) is because God has, Christians believe, incarnated himself in Jesus Christ. Human nature, having been "assumed" by the Divine Word, is now forever sanctified.
This Christian revelation is anticipated in dignity of the poor and slave in the Hebrew revelation, because Yhwh--who Christians affirm to also be the Father of Jesus Christ--brought the Israelites out of slavery.)
Without revelation, one must attempt to ground dignity in some abstract philosophical principles, which inevitably founder in the antinomies of human reason. You observe one such contradiction: if dignity is grounded in moral agency, then how does a sleeping person have such dignity? All the logical effort in the world can only produce possible answers. Only revelation--the voice of a transcendental power or truth--can manifest to me MY dignity, a dignity bestowed upon me by that voice.
BTW, if you believe that extending "human rights" to animals will NOT have adverse consequences on the former, then you need to pick a "contemporary moral issues" textbook.
God has spoken to us humans (if we listen and obey). He has NOT spoken to animals. That is why humans have dignity, and animals do not.
Human beings have rights in virtue of their nature, i.e. the type of being they are - rational and thus moral. The embryo, fetus, child, grandma Smith, persons in a comma etc have rights because they all share the same nature - is some more developed that in others. This nature (soul) is not reduced to the mind, but the organizing principle that makes a human a human being, not a cat or table.



In the US corporations have status like a person. Joe Biden said "GM is alive ...".
Is your comment a bit misleading?
In neither the US not New Zealand does a child in its mothers womb yet have he status of a "person". Now there is something to work for over one's lifetime.