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Regardless of your philosophy, you can reduce suffering today:

For most of human history, animals were viewed as property or resources. Descartes famously called them automata—machines that could feel no pain. Fast forward to today, science has confirmed what any pet owner already knew: animals are sentient beings. They feel joy, fear, pain, and loneliness.

The question isn't if they feel, but how much does that matter?

Let’s break down the two major philosophies. Regardless of your philosophy, you can reduce suffering

Animal rights is a deontological (duty-based) philosophy. Led most famously by legal scholar Tom Regan ( The Case for Animal Rights ), this position argues that animals have inherent value simply because they are "subjects of a life." They have beliefs, desires, memory, and a sense of a future.

Consequently, rights advocates argue that animals are not property. They cannot be owned, used, or killed for human purposes, no matter how "humane" the conditions. For a rights advocate, a "free-range" slaughterhouse is still a slaughterhouse. The abolition of animal exploitation—not its regulation—is the goal.

We will never fully agree on whether a pig has the same "right to life" as a human. But we can agree on this: Inflicting unnecessary suffering on a sentient being is a moral failure. If you enjoyed this deep dive, subscribe to

The animal welfare movement says: Let’s make the cage bigger and the death quicker. The animal rights movement says: Let’s break the cage entirely.

But both movements look at a factory farm and say: This is wrong.

So, where do you stand? Do you want to treat animals better? Or do you want to stop using them altogether? If you enjoyed this deep dive

I don't have the final answer. But I know that asking the question—and changing your shopping list because of it—is the most human thing you can do.

Let’s talk in the comments: Do you think "happy meat" is a myth or a goal worth striving for?


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