Human Exceptionalism

Center on Human Exceptionalism

A-Rat-is-a-Pig-is-a-Dog-is-a-Boy-Wesley-J-Smith

A Rat is a Pig is a Dog is a Boy

Over the past thirty years, as Wesley J. Smith details in his latest book, the concept of animal rights has been seeping into the very bone marrow of Western culture. One reason for this development is that the term “animal rights” is so often used very loosely, to mean simply being nicer to animals. But although animal rights groups do Read More ›

Rats, Pigs, and Dogs: Oh Boy!

This article, published by Humane Watch, provides a review of Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley J. Smith’s book A Rat Is a Pig Is a Dog Is a Boy: When Wesley J. Smith first told me he was thinking of writing a book about the animal rights movement, my initial reaction was one of very cautious optimism. … Happily, my worries Read More ›

Rat = Pig = Dog = Boy = Moral Nonsense

My friend, Wesley J. Smith, has a new, long-anticipated book critiquing the animal rights movement. It takes its title from an infamous statement by Ingrid Newkirk, head of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals: A Rat Is a Pig Is a Dog Is a Boy. Animal rights, like environmentalism, sounds like something that every well-meaning person should support. But it’s Read More ›

Unless We All Matter

If you want to accurately predict what could soon go wrong in society, just read the professional journals. Case in point: A bioethicist named Alasdair Cochrane, a deep thinker at the Centre for the Study of Human Rights in the UK, argued recently in Bioethics that we should discard our (already tenuous) embrace of intrinsic human dignity as the foundational basis for establishing Read More ›

Everyone Matters, No Matter What

In 1992, Jack Kevorkian proposed establishing a pilot program of euthanasia clinics, which, he argued in the Journal of Forensic Pathology, would be staffed by physician-killers, permitted legally to painlessly terminate patients who request it. At the time, euthanasia clinics were considered either a far kook fringe idea, or perhaps, a splendid fictional image reserved for dystopian science fiction. No longer. Read More ›

Between the Covers

“The very people who deny human exceptionalism in the animal rights movement are asking us to engage in hyper-duties towards animals which would be an act of exceptionalism,” says Wesley J. Smith, author of A Rat Is a Pig Is a Dog Is a Boy: The Human Cost of the Animal Rights Movement. Senior Fellow Wesley J. Smith was interviewed by National Review’s John Read More ›

Technological Morality

As we come to the end of the first tenth of the 21st century, pundits are making lists about the decade just past: the biggest stories, the worst movies. In that spirit, here’s a list of the top ten stories in bioethics. This isn’t an idle exercise. Bioethics matters. The field exerts tremendous influence over the most important questions of Read More ›

More Spin Will Cause, Not Cure, Public Mistrust of Science

Chris Mooney is a partisan author (The Republican War on Science) and a leftist political advocate. He has made a career of pushing ideological goals as if they were objective scientific agendas. And of course many science journalists–often in name only–have followed his lead, particularly in the fields of global warming and embryonic stem cell research, which I deal with, and Read More ›

St. Odd? Catholic best-selling author Koontz explores spirituality, evil

This article, published by the Catholic Education Resource Center, quotes Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley Smith: Attorney and bioethics author Wesley Smith was first introduced to Koontz’s work following the publication of the novel One Door Away From Heaven. In that book, one of the storylines focuses on a bioethicist who sets out to breed disabled people so that he can Read More ›