As we recognize 
more and more 
the similarities rather than
the differences between 
humans and animals, 
the idea of a dividing line 
between the two becomes 
more and more obscure 
and difficult to draw. 
The difference between 
humans and animals 
is not at all clear.
Halo thoughtful viewers, 
and welcome to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
On today's program, 
we meet Dr. Gary Steiner,  
a John Howard Harris 
Professor of Philosophy 
at Bucknell University, 
USA and author 
who strongly believes 
that animals merit a 
moral status comparable 
to that of human beings. 
He has written 
several books including 
“Descartes 
as a Moral Thinker,” 
“Anthropocentrism
and Its Discontents” 
and his most recent work, 
“Animals and 
the Moral Community: 
Mental Life, Moral Status, 
and Kinship.” 
Dr. Steiner 
considers himself 
an “ethical vegan” 
and now describes 
what is meant by this term.
People come to veganism 
for different reasons.   
Some people do it 
because of health concerns, 
some people do it for 
environmental concerns, 
and some people do it,   
because they feel 
that we have specific 
moral obligations 
toward animals. 
People 
who are ethical vegans 
believe that 
we have the obligation 
not to eat animals, 
not to use them. 
Depending upon how strict 
a vegan a person is, 
they might decide 
not to wear leather, 
not to wear silk, 
not to wear wool.  
Then of course 
this opens up the door 
to all sorts of 
other sorts of products, 
like medications 
and cosmetics that 
might involve animals 
in their production 
or in the composition. 
So to be an ethical vegan 
is to recognize, 
as a specific direct duty 
to animals, to treat them 
with kindness and 
to employ the principle of
ahimsa or non-violence 
toward them. 
For Dr. Steiner, 
becoming an ethical vegan 
was a gradual evolution, 
with refinement 
coming over the course 
of many years.
What led me 
to ethical veganism was 
a long process in my life. 
It started 
from a very early age 
with simply loving animals, 
having a real feeling 
of kinship with animals. 
And as I got older and 
went into my adolescence, 
and into my 20s, I started 
thinking more seriously 
about the contradiction 
between loving animals 
on the one hand, 
and eating them 
and wearing them 
and so forth. 
And so I stopped 
eating meat one day, and 
I just never ate it again. 
So I went vegetarian first 
of all. 
But I was still thinking 
about other things like 
eggs and dairy products 
and the fact 
that the production 
and consumption of 
those sorts of substances 
requires viewing animals 
and using animals 
in certain ways. 
I decided 
that it was something 
I couldn’t participate in 
any longer. 
I stopped eating 
all animal products 
at that point. 
And then over a period 
of years I started 
thinking more and more 
about the fact 
if I am not going to 
eat animal products, 
I have to start thinking 
about wearing them, 
and doing other things 
that involve the uses 
of animals 
as basically objects 
for the satisfaction 
of human needs. 
More recently 
it has moved on to things 
like cosmetics, medications 
and other things. 
After a period of time, 
Dr. Steiner felt 
it was not enough for him 
to simply live an 
ethically vegan lifestyle. 
He decided get his students 
at Bucknell University 
thinking about 
society’s views of animals 
and how animals 
see the world.
I teach a variety 
of different types 
of philosophy courses, 
and starting 
about 10 years ago, 
I started to teach some 
courses specifically on, 
or related to, 
questions about animals 
and the relationship 
between human beings 
and animals, questions 
about the nature 
of animal cognition 
or the mental 
or subjective experience 
of animals, and, how 
those types of experiences 
are related to the 
moral status of animals.
Dr. Steiner now shares 
how the students 
have responded 
to these courses.
When students 
are college age, and 
when they’re in college, 
they’re probably 
at the most curious 
they’re going to be 
in their adult lives, before 
they start formulating 
and establishing certain 
sorts of convictions 
and ways 
of looking at the world. 
They are 
relatively open-minded 
when they’re in college. 
And I’ve had 
a surprising number 
of students 
who’ve responded in a 
very positive and curious 
and concerned way 
about the work 
that I do on animals. 
I have heard from present 
and former students 
as well as 
a lot of other people. 
And, some students 
remain fast
in their convictions. 
In response to 
the growing interest, 
Dr. Steiner began offering 
even more courses about 
the relationship between 
humans and animals, 
and our moral obligation 
towards animals.
I taught an introduction 
to philosophy course, 
just this past semester, 
under the title “Gods, 
Humans and Animals.” 
And this is something 
I I just thought would be 
an interesting thing to do, 
partly because 
that would have me 
addressing primarily 
not college seniors but 
brand new college students, 
first-semester 
college students. 
And I wasn’t really sure 
how they would react, 
and this is what happened. 
I thought they would be 
taking the course because 
they wanted to spend time 
learning about 
the western conceptions 
of God, particularly 
in the Christian tradition, 
and also about 
western conceptions 
of humans. 
What ended up happening 
was that the students 
seemed the most 
intellectually engaged by 
the last part of the course, 
which was on views 
about animals. 
 
And I was fascinated 
to find that these students 
have been very curious. 
The discussions 
have been extremely lively. 
I’ve always been 
a little bit inhibited 
about sharing my views 
about animals. 
I never thought about 
myself as an activist 
or anything like that. 
I think of myself 
as a philosophy professor 
who writes books 
for other philosophers 
about animals. 
And what I’m just 
beginning to find out is 
there are people out there, 
including my students, 
who have a real 
fascination with this, 
that they’ve never 
thought about these 
questions before, and 
they realize that they’re 
very important questions, 
and they want to 
think about them. 
When we return, 
we will hear 
more wise thoughts 
from Dr. Gary Steiner 
about the moral status 
of animals. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
The first thing 
one has to see 
is that sentient creatures 
and chickens are 
much more intelligent than 
we give them credit for. 
They have very elaborate 
social systems, 
social organization, they 
have a very good sense 
of what's going on. 
And we not only 
show them no respect 
but we're committing, 
I think, a real sin 
by killing them. 
Welcome back to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants, 
as we continue 
our interview 
with Dr. Gary Steiner, 
a John Howard Harris 
Professor of Philosophy 
at Bucknell University, 
USA and the author of 
several thoughtful books 
including his latest: 
“Animals and 
the Moral Community: 
Mental Life, Moral Status, 
and Kinship.” 
In your latest book, you 
argue that animals merit 
moral status comparable 
to that of human beings. 
Can you tell us more 
about that?
Yes. 
The idea is this: 
the Western 
philosophical tradition
going all the way back
to the ancient Greeks, 
has taken the view 
that human beings are 
fundamentally superior 
to animals. 
And they gave a variety 
of arguments or reasons 
for that. 
One is the idea that God 
or the gods created nature 
to satisfy human beings, 
they created animals 
and plants and so forth 
for the sake 
of human beings,
specifically for us, 
which means we can do 
anything we want with them, 
and we don’t 
have to worry about 
the moral implications. 
Another traditional line 
or argumentation 
has been that animals are 
inferior to human beings 
in terms of 
their cognitive abilities. 
And that translates 
into the idea 
that human beings 
are morally superior and 
that we can use animals 
and that the animals…
are not 
morally comparable 
to human beings.
Dr. Steiner is challenging 
this traditional belief system 
by asking society 
to look at our 
animal co-inhabitants from 
a different perspective. 
What philosophers 
have traditionally argued 
is animals can't 
think of themselves 
as individual selves 
among other selves. 
They can't think about 
the idea that 
they have obligations 
or that they have rights, 
anything like that. 
And all of these things 
have led philosophers 
in the West traditionally 
to the conclusion that 
animals don't really have 
any kind of moral status, 
certainly nothing 
comparable to 
that of human beings. 
And in my work 
on animals, 
what I started to recognize 
and what I’ve argued for 
is this: differences 
in intellectual ability 
and differences 
in cognitive ability 
don't have 
any moral significance 
whatsoever any more than 
they do among humans. 
So the fact that 
there are people out there 
who are smarter than me 
doesn't mean that they're 
morally superior to me. 
And by the same token, 
the fact that 
or the supposed fact that 
I'm somehow smarter 
than my cat, Pindar, 
has nothing to do 
with whether I have a right 
to use him or treat him 
like a toy 
or own him as property 
or anything like that. 
What's important, 
moral status 
is not how smart you are 
or how sophisticated 
your cognitive abilities are 
but rather the notion 
of sentience, 
which is the ability 
to feel pleasure and pain, 
the capacity to suffer 
and so forth. 
And these I think are, 
capacities that go together 
with consciousness. 
And that I think is 
what’s decisive morally. 
Pindar’s subjective life 
is really no different 
than mine. 
And I don't see how
my ability to do math or
write philosophy books 
or to employ language 
in the way in which 
human beings use it 
has any significance 
whatsoever for 
the relative moral status 
of myself versus, say, 
a cat or a dog or any 
other sentient creature. 
Dr. Steiner says that by 
recognizing that sentience 
is paramount, 
we will always respect 
and protect all animal life.
So, if we could agree 
that sentience, rather 
than cognitive ability, 
is really what's important 
as a criterion 
and for moral status 
then I don't think 
there's any way 
that somebody could say 
that objectively my life 
matters more than Pindar’s. 
My life matters to me 
exactly as much 
as Pindar’s matters 
in the following sense. 
His life 
matters infinitely to him 
and mine 
matters infinitely to me. 
So, from that standpoint, 
I don't think 
there's any way of saying 
that my life matters 
more than his. 
And so his (life) 
should be considered 
from a moral standpoint 
to be every bit 
as significant as mine. 
And I think that's true for 
any being that is sentient.
My own view is, 
we, animals and humans 
are morally comparable 
to one another and, 
I should add, human beings 
are after all, animals. 
How do we 
ethically justify keeping 
animal companions 
while consuming 
the flesh of other animals? 
How can we live and eat 
more consciously? 
Please join us again 
tomorrow for Part 2 
of our program 
as the insightful 
Dr. Gary Steiner answers 
these and other 
important questions.
For more details 
on Dr. Steiner, 
please visit
www.FacStaff.Bucknell.edu/GSteiner
Books by Dr. Steiner 
are available on 
Amazon.com
Thank you for joining us 
on today’s Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May we all grow each day 
in wisdom, grace, 
and compassion.
Why is it important 
to refrain from 
animal-based products? 
Once you start learning 
more about animal rights, 
you really can’t 
not be vegan. 
As soon as you start 
reading about 
the dairy industry and 
the egg production industry, 
there’s no choice, 
you can’t go back….
Hear some useful tips 
on selecting food, 
clothing, cosmetics, 
and other items that are 
compassionate to animals 
on “Living the 
Cruelty-Free Lifestyle” 
Monday, February 22 
on Healthy Living.
Fabrice Nicolino 
of France has recently 
written a book 
documenting the horrors 
of factory farming
in France. 
It’s a book that 
I’ve really dedicated 
explicitly to the animals, 
dead without having lived, 
and that’s very important 
for me. 
There is this sentiment 
that obsesses me, 
a real sadness.  
I tell myself, 
“Why have we humans 
dared to treat animals 
in this way? 
How do we dare 
treat them like that?”
Please watch Part 2 of 
“Stop Animal Cruelty: 
Fabrice Nicolino, Author 
of ‘The Meat Industry 
Threatens Our World’” 
today on 
Supreme Master Television.
I really want to 
separate the question of 
what people feel like doing 
or what people think 
they can accommodate 
in their lives. 
I want to separate 
that kind of question 
from what I think 
is a moral question, 
which is, 
do we have a right? 
Are we entitled 
to eat animals? 
And I want to be 
very, very clear 
that in my judgment 
we don’t have that right. 
Halo, intelligent viewers, 
and welcome to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
On today's program, 
we feature Part 2 
our interview 
with Dr. Gary Steiner, 
a John Howard Harris 
Professor of Philosophy 
at Bucknell University, 
USA and author 
who calls himself 
an “ethical vegan,” 
meaning that he has 
adopted a vegan lifestyle 
because he believes 
animals are sentient beings 
and we have a moral duty 
toward them.
He has written 
several books including 
“Descartes 
as a Moral Thinker,” 
“Anthropocentrism
and Its Discontents” 
and his most recent work, 
“Animals and 
the Moral Community: 
Mental Life, Moral Status, 
and Kinship.” 
Dr. Steiner now explains 
why he uses the word 
“moral” when discussing 
the relationship between 
animals and humans.
I think the reason 
it's important here 
is because 
it carries a weight 
that a lot of other words 
that we might use 
don't carry. 
So, here's an example. 
Sometimes people think: 
you shouldn't 
go out of your way 
to be cruel to animals 
but there's nothing 
that you really owe them 
in terms of 
moral obligations. 
But I think the idea 
of a moral obligation 
is something 
that's very important. 
To say that we have 
a moral obligation 
means there's something 
like a brick wall there 
that we're not supposed 
to breach. 
And I think once 
we're able to say that 
we have moral obligations 
towards animals, 
that's something like 
a kind of armor 
that animals get to wear 
that says, 
there are certain things 
we must never ever do. 
And I think that the notion 
of a moral obligation 
toward animals 
is exactly that. 
It's a very powerful 
kind of commitment 
that we ought to 
recognize ourselves to have. 
If we recognize 
that animals and humans 
are really comparable 
to each other morally 
then we have to recognize 
that we have the same 
sorts of obligations 
of non-harm 
and non-violence and 
obligations of respect 
toward animals that 
we have toward humans.  
Dr. Steiner explains that, 
like humans, animals 
have deep emotions and 
a great capacity for love.
Pindar is a rescue cat. 
I got him 
a couple of years ago. 
I wasn't really looking for 
another cat. 
I had had a couple of cats 
for a long time and 
I loved them very much 
and had, what I felt was 
a very, very intimate bond 
with them. 
A kind of bond that I think, 
it was very much 
like the bond 
that many people have, 
say with their children. 
So, these two cats had 
lived a long life with me 
and they had both 
recently passed away 
of old age and then 
this rescue cat 
got sort of presented to me, 
foisted upon me. 
So I took this cat in and 
after he got healthy again, 
this wonderful 
personality emerged. 
And he turned out to be 
this really, really gentle, 
wonderful creature. 
And I would say 
that there is a kind of 
love bond between us. 
It seems very clear to me 
that Pindar has a
loving feeling toward me. 
And it might be 
the kind of loving feeling 
that a little child has 
when it's two or three 
or four years old 
towards its parent. 
I don't think 
anybody would say 
that little human children 
are incapable of love 
even though they can't 
think about their love. 
And I think that 
what's going on in Pindar 
is something like that. 
And I think 
in many animals 
there's all sorts of signs 
of affection and regard 
that animals show 
toward each other 
and that they show 
toward humans.
For many people there is 
a sad contradiction 
present in their relationship 
with animals. 
Dr. Steiner provides 
his perspective 
on this inconsistency.
It’s a very, very troubling 
reality that there are 
these contradictions and 
conflicts in people’s lives. 
The pet industry is a 
multi-billion dollar industry 
in the United States. 
And people who have pets 
quite often love them 
almost like a family member, 
and are very upset 
when bad things 
happen to their pets, 
and if they are in a 
financial position to do it, 
will spend an enormous 
amount of money 
on their pets, on treats 
and toys and 
high quality food 
and go to great lengths 
to lavish love and 
consideration on their pets. 
So it’s particularly 
conspicuous and troubling 
that the very same people, 
or many of 
the very same people, 
who love their pets, 
are willing to gamble 
on dog fighting, 
or cockfighting show 
a pretty blatant disregard 
for animals, in being willing 
to subject them 
to experiments 
that are pretty gruesome.
When we return, 
we will learn more 
from Dr. Gary Steiner 
about the moral obligation 
of humanity to 
adopt the vegan lifestyle. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
We need to be able to 
find a way to articulate 
clear principles about 
the rights of animals, 
not to be used 
by human beings, 
establishing clear legal 
and moral principles 
that tell us it’s wrong 
to inflict violence or 
inflict harm on animals. 
Welcome back to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants 
as we continue 
our interview 
with Dr. Gary Steiner, 
a John Howard Harris 
Professor of Philosophy 
at Bucknell University, 
USA, author, 
and a pure vegan who 
has chosen this lifestyle 
for ethical reasons.  
Cognitive dissonance is 
a term from psychology 
which describes 
a condition where
anxiety is created when
there is a gulf between
what one believes 
and one’s actual actions. 
Previously Dr. Steiner gave 
the example of people 
who adore and 
shower affection upon 
their animal companions 
being inconsistent when 
they view other animals 
as merely objects 
for consumption, 
experimentation 
or entertainment.
They find themselves able 
to turn a blind eye towards 
what really goes on 
in the production 
of the meat that they eat 
and so forth. 
And I think 
that there is a kind of 
cognitive dissonance there. 
They can’t
allow themselves to 
acknowledge the reality 
of what goes on. 
And also they’re coming 
out of a very, very long 
history of practices, 
such as meat eating. 
So I have not infrequently 
encountered people 
who’ve said: “Boy, 
I’ve heard that the way 
that veal is raised, 
or the way 
that chickens are raised, 
or the way 
that pigs are raised, 
is kind of gruesome. 
So I don’t really want to 
know anymore about that.” 
I think the only thing 
that’s going to get people 
to overcome that sort of 
contradiction or tension, 
is a willingness 
to look at the facts 
and really think about 
the inconsistencies 
in their own behavior. 
That thinking 
has to get to the point of 
altering our feelings, 
so that when I start 
to think about the fact 
that the food on my plate 
is essentially 
the same as me, it might 
make me feel differently 
about eating that food. 
Only when that happens, 
I think will people really 
recognize this contradiction 
and try to resolve it. 
In Dr. Stein’s view what 
is our foremost obligation 
in fulfilling our moral 
duties toward animals?
I think 
that we have obligations 
toward animals. 
Our obligation, 
I think first of all is 
to lead a vegan lifestyle 
at the very minimum. 
There's no justification 
for inflicting the terrible 
harms that things 
like factory farming 
and experimentation 
on animals and 
all sorts of other things 
that we do. 
So from square one, 
I think the first thing 
that we have 
is an obligation 
not to harm animals, 
not to exercise violence 
or visit violence upon them. 
And the, the most 
straightforward way to 
understand that obligation 
is to become vegan 
and to stay vegan. 
 
So being a vegan I think 
is a very important thing.
On December 1, 2009, 
the Lisbon Treaty 
came into effect 
and per Article 13 
the European Union now 
formally recognizes all 
animals as sentient beings. 
We asked Dr. Steiner 
about the role of 
government in regulating 
the relationship between 
humans and animals.
Professor Francione at 
Rutgers (University USA) 
argues that 
if it were possible 
through legislation
to abolish the property 
status of animals, 
that’s the single 
most important thing 
that either government or 
the law or the legislation 
could do.
Because
in the Anglo-American 
legal tradition 
going back centuries, 
animals have been 
classified as property, 
they are things that we own; 
they’re chattel. 
And that enables people 
to do all sort of things 
because you can destroy 
your own property. 
It might not be 
a smart thing to do, 
but there is no law 
prohibiting you 
from doing it.  
 
And that means 
you can raise animals 
and kill them 
for human consumption, 
you can sell them, 
you can use them, you 
can experiment on them. 
If it were ever possible 
to classify animals 
legally as non-property, 
as something 
like legal persons, then 
that would prevent people 
from killing animals, 
experimenting on them 
and so forth. 
It would essentially put 
animals in the situation 
of really being 
considered morally 
comparable to 
human beings, in the sense 
that if you can’t do it 
to a human being, you’re 
not going to be allowed 
to do it to an animal. 
I think that’s the best thing 
that either government 
or legislation 
could possibly do
is abolish the property 
status of animals.
According to Dr. Steiner, 
if we truly care 
for our planet, 
each one of us must take 
personal responsibility 
to lead more thoughtful 
and conscientious lives.
I think all the things that 
we do that inflict violence 
upon animals in nature 
and perhaps to ecosystems, 
that’s something 
that we have to think 
very, very carefully about. 
So anytime, 
I buy something
that involves packaging, 
things like that or anytime 
I consume something 
that’s going to end up 
polluting the waterways 
or wetlands, I have to be 
thinking very carefully 
about all of those things. 
But square one, 
the starting point, 
I think, is our relation to 
sentient life, to animal life. 
And I think the first thing 
that most people can do, 
is to become vegan. 
And be a strict vegan. 
 
Be Veg, 
Go Green, 
Save the Planet.
We deeply thank 
Dr. Gary Steiner 
and all those like him 
who not only 
live the vegan lifestyle, 
but also seek to raise 
the awareness of others 
regarding our moral duty 
toward our animal friends, 
thus saving 
countless numbers 
of their precious lives. 
We look forward to 
the day soon in coming 
where all sentient beings 
on Earth 
live in harmony and peace.
For more details 
on Dr. Steiner, 
please visit
www.FacStaff.Bucknell.edu/GSteiner
Books by Dr. Steiner 
are available on 
Amazon.com
Thank you for joining us 
today on Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
right after 
Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May joy and tenderness 
fill your heart each day.