ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
The primary consideration in regard
to the question of diet should be, as already stated,
the hygienic. Having shown that the non-flesh
diet is the more natural, and the more advantageous
from the point of view of health, let us now consider
which of the two vegetarianism or omnivorism is
superior from the ethical point of view.
The science of ethics is the science
of conduct. It is founded, primarily, upon philosophical
postulates without which no code or system of morals
could be formulated. Briefly, these postulates
are, (a), every activity of man has as its deepest
motive the end termed Happiness, (b) the Happiness
of the individual is indissolubly bound up with the
Happiness of all Creation. The truth of (a) will
be evident to every person of normal intelligence:
all arts and systems aim consciously, or unconsciously,
at some good, and so far as names are concerned everyone
will be willing to call the Chief Good by the term
Happiness, although there may be unlimited diversity
of opinion as to its nature, and the means to attain
it. The truth of (b) also becomes apparent if
the matter is carefully reflected upon. Everything
that is en rapport with all other things:
the pebble cast from the hand alters the centre of
gravity in the Universe. As in the world of things
and acts, so in the world of thought, from which all
action springs. Nothing can happen to the part
but the whole gains or suffers as a consequence.
Every breeze that blows, every cry that is uttered,
every thought that is born, affects through perpetual
metamorphoses every part of the entire Cosmic Existence.
We deduce from these postulates the
following ethical precepts: a wise man will,
firstly, so regulate his conduct that thereby he may
experience the greatest happiness; secondly, he will
endeavour to bestow happiness on others that by so
doing he may receive, indirectly, being himself a
part of the Cosmic Whole, the happiness he gives.
Thus supreme selfishness is synonymous with supreme
egoism, a truth that can only be stated paradoxically.
Applying this latter precept to the
matter in hand, it is obvious that since we should
so live as to give the greatest possible happiness
to all beings capable of appreciating it, and as it
is an indisputable fact that animals can suffer pain,
and that men who slaughter animals needlessly suffer
from atrophy of all finer feelings, we should
therefore cause no unnecessary suffering in the animal
world. Let us then consider whether, knowing
flesh to be unnecessary as an article of diet, we
are, in continuing to demand and eat flesh-food, acting
morally or not. To answer this query is not difficult.
It is hardly necessary to say that
we are causing a great deal of suffering among animals
in breeding, raising, transporting, and killing them
for food. It is sometimes said that animals do
not suffer if they are handled humanely, and if they
are slaughtered in abattoirs under proper superintendence.
But we must not forget the branding and castrating
operations; the journey to the slaughter-house, which
when trans-continental and trans-oceanic
must be a long drawn-out nightmare of horror and terror
to the doomed beasts; we must not forget the insatiable
cruelty of the average cowboy; we must not forget that
the animal inevitably spends at least some minutes
of instinctive dread and fear when he smells and sees
the spilt blood of his forerunners, and that this
terror is intensified when, as is frequently the case,
he witnesses the dying struggles, and hears the heart-rending
groans; we must not forget that the best contrivances
sometimes fail to do good work, and that a certain
percentage of victims have to suffer a prolonged death-agony
owing to the miscalculation of a bad workman.
Most people go through life without thinking of these
things: they do not stop and consider from whence
and by what means has come to their table the flesh-food
that is served there. They drift along through
a mundane existence without feeling a pang of remorse
for, or even thought of, the pain they are accomplices
in producing in the sub-human world. And it cannot
be denied, hide it how we may, either from our eyes
or our conscience, that however skilfully the actual
killing may usually be carried out, there is much
unavoidable suffering caused to the beasts that have
to be transported by sea and rail to the slaughter-house.
The animals suffer violently from sea-sickness, and
horrible cruelty (such as pouring boiling oil into
their ears, and stuffing their ears with hay which
is then set on fire, tail-twisting, etc.,) has
to be practised to prevent them lying down lest they
be trampled on by other beasts and killed; for this
means that they have to be thrown overboard, thus
reducing the profits of their owners, or of the insurance
companies, which, of course, would be a sad calamity.
Judging by the way the men act it does not seem to
matter what cruelties and tortures are perpetuated;
what heinous offenses against every humane sentiment
of the human heart are committed; it does not matter
to what depths of Satanic callousness man stoops provided
always that this is the supreme question there
is money to be made by it.
A writer has thus graphically described
the scene in a cattle-boat in rough weather:
’Helpless cattle dashed from one side of the
ship to the other, amid a ruin of smashed pens, with
limbs broken from contact with hatchway combings or
winches dishorned, gored, and some of them
smashed to mere bleeding masses of hide-covered flesh.
Add to this the shrieking of the tempest, and the
frenzied moanings of the wounded beasts, and the reader
will have some faint idea of the fearful scenes of
danger and carnage ... the dead beasts, advanced,
perhaps, in decomposition before death ended their
sufferings, are often removed literally in pieces.’
And on the railway journey, though
perhaps the animals do not experience so much physical
pain as travelling by sea, yet they are often deprived
of food, and water, and rest, for long periods, and
mercilessly knocked about and bruised. They are
often so injured that the cattle-men are surprised
they have not succumbed to their injuries. And
all this happens in order that the demand for unnecessary
flesh-food may be satisfied.
Those who defend flesh-eating often
talk of humane methods of slaughtering; but it is
significant that there is considerable difference
of opinion as to what is the most humane method.
In England the pole-axe is used; in Germany the mallet;
the Jews cut the throat; the Italians stab. It
is obvious that each of these methods cannot be better
than the others, yet the advocates of each method consider
the others cruel. As Lieut. Powell remarks,
this ’goes far to show that a great deal of
cruelty and suffering is inseparable from all methods.’
It is hard to imagine how anyone believing
he could live healthily on vegetable food alone, could,
having once considered these things, continue a meat-eater.
At least to do so he could not live his life in conformity
with the precept that we should cause no unnecessary
pain.
How unholy a custom, how easy a way to
murder he makes for himself
Who cuts the innocent throat of the calf,
and hears unmoved its
mournful plaint!
And slaughters the little kid, whose cry
is like the cry of a child,
Or devours the birds of the air which
his own hands have fed!
Ah, how little is wanting to fill the
cup of his wickedness!
What unrighteous deed is he not ready
to commit.
Make war on noxious creatures, and
kill them only,
But let your mouths be empty of blood, and satisfied
with pure
and natural repasts.
OVID.
Metam., lib. xv.
That we cannot find any justification
for destroying animal life for food does not imply
we should never destroy animal life. Such a cult
would be pure fanaticism. If we are to consider
physical well-being as of primary importance, it follows
that we shall act in self-preservation ‘making
war on noxious creatures.’ But this again
is no justification for ‘blood-sports.’
He who inflicts pain needlessly, whether
by his own hand or by that of an accomplice, not only
injures his victim, but injures himself. He stifles
what nobleness of character he may have and he cultivates
depravity and barbarism. He destroys in himself
the spirit of true religion and isolates himself from
those whose lives are made beautiful by sympathy.
No one need hope for a spiritual Heaven while helping
to make the earth a bloody Hell. No one who asks
others to do wrong for him need imagine he escapes
the punishment meted out to wrong-doers. That
he procures the service of one whose sensibilities
are less keen than his own to procure flesh-food for
him that he may gratify his depraved taste and love
of conformity does not make him less guilty of crime.
Were he to kill with his own hand, and himself dress
and prepare the obscene food, the evil would be less,
for then he would not be an accomplice in retarding
the spiritual growth of a fellow being. There
is no shame in any necessary labour, but that
which is unnecessary is unmoral, and slaughtering
animals to eat their flesh is not only unnecessary
and unmoral; it is also cruel and immoral. Philosophers
and transcendentalists who believe in the Buddhist
law of Karma, Westernized by Emerson and Carlyle into
the great doctrine of Compensation, realize that every
act of unkindness, every deed that is contrary to the
dictates of our nobler instincts and reason, reacts
upon us, and we shall truly reap that which we have
sown. An act of brutality brutalizes, and the
more we become brutalized the more we attract natures
similarly brutal and get treated by them brutally.
Thus does Nature sternly deal justice.
’Our acts our angels are, or good or ill,
Our fatal shadows that walk by us still.’
It is appropriate in this place to
point out that some very pointed things are said in
the Bible against the killing and eating of animals.
It has been said that it is possible by judiciously
selecting quotations to find the Bible support almost
anything. However this may be, the following
excerpta are of interest:
’And God said: Behold,
I have given you every herb bearing seed, and every
tree in which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed,
to you it shall be for meat.’ Gen.
i., 29.
’But flesh with life thereof,
which is the blood thereof, ye shall not eat.’ Gen.
ix., 4.
’It shall be a perpetual statute
throughout your generations in all your dwellings,
that ye shall eat neither fat nor blood.’ Lev.
iii., 17.
’Ye shall eat no manner of blood,
whether it be of fowl, or beast.’ Lev.
vii., 26.
’Ye shall eat the blood of no
manner of flesh: for the life of all flesh is
the blood thereof: whosoever eateth it shall be
cut off.’ Lev. xvii., 14.
’The wolf also shall dwell with
the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the
kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling
together; and a little child shall lead them....
They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain.’ Isaiah
lxv.
’He that killeth an ox is as
he that slayeth a man.’ Isaiah lxvi.,
3.
’I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.’ Matt.
ix., 7.
’It is good not to eat flesh,
nor to drink wine, nor to do anything whereby thy
brother stumbleth.’ Romans xiv., 21.
’Wherefore, if meat maketh my
brother to stumble I will eat no flesh for evermore,
that I make not my brother stumble.’ 1
Cor. viii., 13.
The verse from Isaiah is no fanciful
stretch of poetic imagination. The writer, no
doubt, was picturing a condition of peace and happiness
on earth, when discord had ceased and all creatures
obeyed Nature and lived in harmony. It is not
absurd to suppose that someday the birds and beasts
may look upon man as a friend and benefactor, and not
the ferocious beast of prey that he now is. In
certain parts of the world, at the present day the
Galapagos Archipelago, for instance where
man has so seldom been that he is unknown to the indigenous
animal life, travellers relate that birds are so tame
and friendly and curious, being wholly unacquainted
with the bloodthirsty nature of man, that they will
perch on his shoulders and peck at his shoe laces as
he walks.
It may be said that Jesus did not
specifically forbid flesh-food. But then he did
not specifically forbid war, sweating, slavery, gambling,
vivisection, cock and bull fighting, rabbit-coursing,
trusts, opium smoking, and many other things commonly
looked upon as evils which should not exist among
Christians. Jesus laid down general principles,
and we are to apply these general principles to particular
circumstances.
The sum of all His teaching is that
love is the most beautiful thing in the world; that
the Kingdom of Heaven is open to all who really and
truly love. The act of loving is the expression
of a desire to make others happy. All beings
capable of experiencing pain, who have nervous sensibilities
similar to our own, are capable of experiencing the
effect of our love. The love which is unlimited,
which is not confined merely to wife and children,
or blood relations and social companions, or one’s
own nation, or even the entire human race, but is so
comprehensive as to include all life, human and sub-human;
such love as this marks the highest point in moral
evolution that human intelligence can conceive of
or aspire to.
Eastern religions have been more explicit
than Christianity about the sin of killing animals
for food.
In the Laws of Manu, it is
written: ’The man who forsakes not the law,
and eats not flesh-meat like a bloodthirsty demon,
shall attain goodness in this world, and shall not
be afflicted with maladies.’
’Unslaughter is the supreme
virtue, supreme asceticism, golden truth, from which
springs up the germ of religion.’ The Mahabharata.
’Non-killing, truthfulness,
non-stealing, continence, and non-receiving, are called
Yama.’ Patanjalis’ Yoga Aphorisms.
’A Yogi must not think of injuring
anyone, through thought, word or deed, and this applies
not only to man, but to all animals. Mercy shall
not be for men alone, but shall go beyond, and embrace
the whole world.’ Commentary of Vivekananda.
’Surely hell, fire, and repentance
are in store for those who for their pleasure and
gratification cause the dumb animals to suffer pain.’
The Zend Avesta.
Gautama, the Buddha, was most emphatic
in discountenancing the killing of animals for food,
or for any other unnecessary purpose, and Zoroaster
and Confucius are said to have taught the same doctrine.