Literature DB >> 28378038

The Moral Lives of Laboratory Monkeys: Television and the Ethics of Care.

Lesley A Sharp1.   

Abstract

Why do lab monkeys watch TV? This essay examines the preponderance of televisions in primate housing units based in academic research laboratories. Within such labs, television and related visual media are glossed as part-and-parcel of welfare or species-specific enrichment practices intended for research monkeys, a logic that is simultaneously historically- and ontologically-based. In many research centers, television figures prominently in the two inseparable domains of a lab monkey's life: as a research tool employed during experiments, and in housing units where captive monkeys are said to enjoy watching TV during "down time." My purpose is not to determine whether monkeys do indeed enjoy, or need, television; rather, I employ visual media as a means to uncover, and decipher, the moral logic of an ethics of care directed specifically at highly sentient creatures who serve as human proxies in a range of experimental contexts. I suggest that this specialized ethics of animal care materializes Mattingly's notion of "moral laboratories" (Mattingly in Moral laboratories: family peril and the struggle for a good life, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2014), where television mediates the troublesome boundary of species difference among the simian and human subjects who cohabit laboratory worlds.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bioethics; Ethics of care; Interspecies encounters; Laboratory science; Morality in science

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28378038     DOI: 10.1007/s11013-017-9530-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry        ISSN: 0165-005X


  13 in total

1.  Sacrifice and the transformation of the animal body into a scientific object: laboratory culture and ritual practice in the neurosciences.

Authors:  Michael E Lynch
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  1988-05       Impact factor: 3.885

2.  Public good, ethics, and everyday life: beyond the boundaries of bioethics.

Authors:  Veena Das
Journal:  Daedalus       Date:  1999

3.  The responsiveness of Rhesus monkeys to motion pictures.

Authors:  R A BUTLER
Journal:  J Genet Psychol       Date:  1961-06       Impact factor: 1.509

Review 4.  Environmental enrichment for nonhuman primates: theory and application.

Authors:  Corrine K Lutz; Melinda A Novak
Journal:  ILAR J       Date:  2005

5.  Improvising medicine. An African oncology ward in an emerging cancer epidemic.

Authors:  Mallika Sekhar
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2014-06-25

6.  Man in space: the use of animal models.

Authors:  R W Ballard; K A Souza
Journal:  Acta Astronaut       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 2.413

Review 7.  Does the chimpanzee have a theory of mind? 30 years later.

Authors:  Josep Call; Michael Tomasello
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 20.229

Review 8.  Primate cognition.

Authors:  Amanda Seed; Michael Tomasello
Journal:  Top Cogn Sci       Date:  2010-05-27

9.  Assessing the Value of Television as Environmental Enrichment for Individually Housed Rhesus Monkeys: A Behavioral Economic Approach.

Authors:  Linda D. Harris; Edward J. Briand; Rushawn Orth; Gregory Galbicka
Journal:  Contemp Top Lab Anim Sci       Date:  1999-03

10.  Pigtail macaque performance on a challenging joystick task has important implications for enrichment and anxiety within a captive environment.

Authors:  H Lincoln; M W Andrews; L A Rosenblum
Journal:  Lab Anim Sci       Date:  1995-06
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  2 in total

1.  Introduction to "Moral (and Other) Laboratories".

Authors:  Teresa Kuan; Lone Grøn
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2017-06

2.  A Hierarchy of Deaths: Stem Cells, Animals and Humans Understood by Developmental Biologists.

Authors:  Noémie Merleau-Ponty
Journal:  Sci Cult (Lond)       Date:  2019-03-05
  2 in total

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