| Literature DB >> 26479525 |
Cor van der Weele1, Clemens Driessen2.
Abstract
The development of cultured meat has gained urgency through the increasing problems associated with meat, but what it might become is still open in many respects. In existing debates, two main moral profiles can be distinguished. Vegetarians and vegans who embrace cultured meat emphasize how it could contribute to the diminishment of animal suffering and exploitation, while in a more mainstream profile cultured meat helps to keep meat eating sustainable and affordable. In this paper we argue that these profiles do not exhaust the options and that (gut) feelings as well as imagination are needed to explore possible future options. On the basis of workshops, we present a third moral profile, "the pig in the backyard". Here cultured meat is imagined as an element of a hybrid community of humans and animals that would allow for both the consumption of animal protein and meaningful relations with domestic (farm) animals. Experience in the workshops and elsewhere also illustrates that thinking about cultured meat inspires new thoughts on "normal" meat. In short, the idea of cultured meat opens up new search space in various ways. We suggest that ethics can take an active part in these searches, by fostering a process that integrates (gut) feelings, imagination and rational thought and that expands the range of our moral identities.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; design; ethics; in vitro meat; meat; stem cells; sustainable consumption; tissue engineering
Year: 2013 PMID: 26479525 PMCID: PMC4494443 DOI: 10.3390/ani3030647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1First associations: a steak in an Erlenmeyer flask.
First responses to the idea of cultured meat.
| First Response | Percentage (%) |
|---|---|
| Wow! | 40–80 |
| Yuck! | 5–25 |
| Interesting, but… | 10–35 |
| Other | 5–10 |
Figure 2Eindhoven student designs of cultured meat.
Three moral profiles for cultured meat.
| Vegetarian | Sustainable | Pig in the yard | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bad for animals, therefore bad | Desirable but unsustainable | Riddled with ambivalence | |
| A vegetarian (or perhaps vegan) world | A sustainable world | A better/less alienating world | |
| No animal suffering or even no exploitation at all | Not relevant | Ubiquity of individual animals with personal relations to humans | |
| No animals, so no animal suffering | Large gains in sustainability | New directions and combinations | |
| Moral principles | Quantified data | Tinkering/Relational |