Footnotes to Plato from the foothills of the Superstition Mountains

Cat and Man

From the journal of a cat man.

The cat is happy to reside within his limits: he does not aspire. He is incapable of hubris. There are no feline tragedies. A cat can be miserable, and so can a man, but only a man can be wretched. A man is an animal, but an abyss separates him from the other animals. It is this abyssal difference between man and animal, a difference appreciated from Genesis to Heidegger, that justifies the distinction between animalic misery, which man shares with animals, and spiritual wretchedness, which he does not.

Fear and anxiety

A cat can experience fear (Furcht), but he cannot experience anxiety (Angst). I borrow Heidegger's terms for a distinction already to be found in Kierkegaard. The cat, however, experiences fear and does not merely exhibit fear-behavior: an animal is not a machine. Philosophical behaviorism is as false of  the cat as of the man. A cat can feel and show fear and other emotions just as a man can. 'Just as a man can' does not mean to the same degree or in the same way as a man can; it means that both man and cat feel and show fear and other emotions. Both suffer and enjoy mental states. Cartesius take note.

But a man can fake emotion-exhibiting behavior without feeling the corresponding emotions. This is beyond the cat.  He cannot dissemble, not because he is sincere, but because he is beneath dissemblance and sincerity.

Respect

A cat can neither feel nor show respect. A man can feel respect, show respect, but also dissimulate by faking respect. Do I respect my cats? If respect is of persons, then I respect them at best analogously: cats are not persons. Some of us have and express self-respect; no cat does either. Since a cat cannot respect himself, he cannot disrespect himself. Respect is connected with standards and norms and ideals that a man feels himself to be under and beholden to. 

Ideals and time

Having no ideals, the cat does not face the problem of false ideals. This is because he does not strive or aspire. His life is not a project in pursuit of Jungian individuation or any other form of self-integration. He remains within his natural limits in the moment. He cannot feel anxiety in the face of death, for he has no future. But he also has no past. He abides in the abode of the Now. He cannot, however, experience this Now as a nunc stans, the standing Now of eternity. For he is time-bound to the core. A man, as a spiritual being, is not time-bound to the core: he is not spiritually bound to any particular time, and he is not spiritually bound to time in general. Man is a pan-optic, syn-optic spirit, capable of surveying the entire ontological 'scene' including himself and everything  else. He is "a spectator of all time and existence." (Plato)

But he is at the same 'time' — speaking analogically — embedded in the biotic. For he too is an animal.  He is a spiritual animal. No cat is a spiritual animal. And so no cat shares the human predicament. Life for a man is a predicament, not a mere condition.  'Predicament' suggests a state that is unsatisfactory, problematic, transitional: not a status finalis, but a status viatoris. 'Predicament' suggests a condition from which we need to be released or saved if we are to become what we most truly are. Man is homo viator, on the way, spiritually speaking. A cat may be on the prowl, but no cat is on the way. No cat is  in statu viae. A pilgrimage is a physical analog of a man's being metaphysically on the way. But no cat makes a pilgrimage. For what could be his Mecca, his Jerusalem, his Santiago de Compostela? Buddy the cat may be on the road, but he is not on the way.

Buddy the cat on the road

I said that the cat abides in the abode of the Now, but not the standing Now, but the moving Now. That is not to say that he experiences the nunc movens, the moving Now: if he did he would feel regret for the past and both hope and fear for the future. Have you ever met a regretful cat, or a hopeful one?

Self-degradation

Unlike a man, a cat cannot degrade himself. This is because he is an animal merely, unlike a man who is a strange hybrid of animal and spirit. Belonging to both orders, a man is neither an animal merely nor a spirit merely.

And so he is a riddle to himself. The human condition is a predicament; the animalic condition is not. A man asks: What am I? and Who am I? These are two different questions that no cat poses.

Rights

Do cats and other non-human animals have rights? Here is a quick little argument contra. Rights and duties are correlative: whatever has rights has duties. No cat has duties; ergo, no cat has rights. But if so, then no cat has a right to life or a right not to be harmed which would induce in us the obligation not to harm him. Does it follow therefrom that it is morally permissible to torture a cat? Kant faces the difficulty. Jonathan Birch:

Kant himself grapples with this problem in the Metaphysics of Morals (Kant 1797/2017) although he does not, I think, appreciate its gravity. He offers a partial solution: we may not owe obligations to animals, but we can have obligations in regard to animals that we owe to ourselves. The idea is that, in torturing animals, killing them inhumanely, hunting them for sport or treating them without gratitude, one acts without due respect for one’s own humanity. Why? Because mistreating animals dulls one’s “shared feeling of their suffering and so weakens and gradually uproots a natural predisposition that is very serviceable to morality in one’s relations with other human beings” (Kant 1797/2017, 6:433).

Kant’s position is not simply that in mistreating animals I make myself more likely to wrong other people. It is rather that, in mistreating animals, I violate a duty I owe to myself by weakening my disposition for “shared feeling”, or empathy. From the formula of humanity (discussed in more detail in the next section), I have a duty to cultivate morally good dispositions, and I violate this duty if I erode dispositions that are “serviceable to morality”. This has come to be known as the “indirect duty” view.

More on this later, perhaps. I will  give Schopenhauer the last word:

Schopenkatze

To which I add: A man who is gratuitously cruel to men is not a man at all but a demon. Homo homini lupus does not capture the depravity to which humans can sink. Man is not a wolf to man, but a demon to man.

It is perfectly stupid to refer to a human savage, such as a Hamas terrorist, as an animal. Again, no  animal has the power of self-degradation: that is a spiritual power.


Posted

in

, ,

by

Tags:

Comments

17 responses to “Cat and Man”

  1. Vito B. Caiati Avatar
    Vito B. Caiati

    “Do cats and other non-human animals have rights? Here is a quick little argument contra. Rights and duties are correlative: whatever has rights has duties. No cat has duties; ergo, no cat has rights.”
    Question: What of a human being who is born with genetic defects that make it impossible for him to have duties, either now or in the future? If he cannot have duties, does it mean that he thus has no rights? I distinguish this case from that of normal fetuses or infants, who have rights but for a time do not have duties, since their possession of the latter will occur as part of their normal development. In other words, they have rights because they will have rights with duties, while the impaired human being, of whatever age, will not.
    Second Question: A cat is the subject of a life, his own, that is, he is not a thing but a sentient being. As such, I cannot regard him as I do an inanimate object. How much of a claim does his subjectivity, limited as it is, impose on me? In other terms, is the moral landscape occupied only by rational souls? If so, why are sensitive souls, each the subject of a life, excluded from it?

  2. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    Hi, Bill. I agree with your points about a cat’s experience of fear and inability to show and feel respect. You aptly highlight the spiritual abyss that separates humans and non-human animals. I wonder if it’s reasonable to say a bit more. Regarding feline fear, you wrote:
    >>But a man can fake emotion-exhibiting behavior without feeling the corresponding emotions. This is beyond the cat. He cannot dissemble, not because he is sincere, but because he is beneath dissemblance and sincerity.<< And for respect: >>Since a cat cannot respect himself, he cannot disrespect himself. Respect is connected with standards and norms and ideals that a man feels himself to be under and beholden to.<< Chisholm speaks of self-presenting properties and lists “fearing” as one of them. (Theory of Knowledge, Third Edition, 1989, pp. 18-19) He also speaks of a person’s direct acquaintance with himself as a source of self-knowledge linked (at least in some cases) to self-presenting properties, which are sources of certainty for those who have them. He writes: “In knowing them directly, we know ourselves.” (Person and Object, 1979, p. 24) He says that such properties are “such that you are now known directly by yourself to have those properties … If you do have such properties as these, then you have direct knowledge of yourself … you are directly acquainted with yourself.” (25) Chisholm’s points seem right for persons, but not for non-human animals, thus suggesting a significant difference between human fear and feline fear. Human fear is self-presenting, and through it, we know ourselves directly and know ourselves as being such that we are capable of being experiencers of fear. But perhaps fear is not self-presenting for cats and other non-human animals. Cats cannot know themselves as selves; arguably, they lack the concept of ‘self,’ and cannot know via their fear that they are selves and that they are experiencers of fear. Cats can experience fear but lack awareness that they themselves are the experiencers of the fear they experience. It seems similar points can be made about the feline inability to feel and show respect, about the feline relation to time, and about the feline freedom from the human predicament.

  3. BV Avatar
    BV

    Elliot,
    Very interesting comment. I want to avoid the Cartesian view that non-human animals are non-sentient, but I also want to avoid having to say that a cat in a state of fear is aware of itself as fearing.
    Perhaps we should say that fear is not a Chisholmian self-presenting property in cats.
    Some people report the following experience. They’ve been driving a while and driving competently, stopping on the red, going on the green, negotiating curves, etc. but then it strikes them that during that period of time they were not aware of themselves doing these things. They were aware of stop signs and such but were not aware either explicitly (via reflection) or implicitly (via what Sartre calls the pre-reflective cogito) of being aware. Their awareness during the period was purely external with no simultaneous secondary awareness of being outwardly aware.
    Well, if that happens in us sometimes, then perhaps that happens in cats all the time. They are conscious of this and that — and are therefore not machines — but never conscious of being conscious. Hector-Neri Castaneda coined a term for this sort of conscious being: ‘Externus’ Perhaps cats are externi.

  4. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    Bill,
    You wrote: >>Well, if that happens in us sometimes, then perhaps that happens in cats all the time. They are conscious of this and that — and are therefore not machines — but never conscious of being conscious. Hector-Neri Castaneda coined a term for this sort of conscious being: ‘Externus’ Perhaps cats are externi.<< That point strikes me as correct and seems important to the question of animal suffering. By the way, in mid-December 2021, I was driving through an area near my home that had been mostly forested for the last decade or so but had started to undergo mass construction of gated communities. I was thinking about the webcam I had recently purchased for my lectures. I became aware of the smell of smoke. However, since I was focusing on the webcam (and on the road!), I was not immediately aware that I was aware of the smell. Seconds later, the smoky stench became stronger, and I saw a controlled fire being used to clear a forested area. Then, I shifted from thinking about my camera to thinking about the smoke and my awareness of it. I became aware of my awareness of the smoke, and I immediately recalled that, seconds earlier, I was aware of the smoke but not aware of my awareness of it. I began to ponder this second-order awareness. I realized that my pondering was a third-order of consciousness. I was thinking about the fact that I became aware that I was aware of the smoke. I later recorded this event in my philosophical notes/journal. I noted to myself that humans are capable of such higher-order awareness. However, there is no sufficient evidence that non-human animals can do this, indicating a significant difference between humans and non-human animals.

  5. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    >>I want to avoid the Cartesian view that non-human animals are non-sentient, …<< I do, too. It seems beyond reasonable doubt that most non-human animals are sentient, though I’m not sure about Placozoa and Porifera. >>Well, if that happens in us sometimes, then perhaps that happens in cats all the time. They are conscious of this and that — and are therefore not machines — but never conscious of being conscious.<< Descartes is associated with the view that non-human animals are non-sentient, like machines. The 5th Century Buddhist philosopher Buddhaghosa supposedly went even further, seemingly holding that human animals are like machines. “Just as a mechanical doll is empty, soulless, and undirected, and while it walks and stands merely through the combination of strings and wood, yet it seems as if it had direction and occupation; so too, this minded body is empty, soulless, and undirected, and while it walks and stands merely through the combination of the two together, yet it seems as if it had direction and occupation.” (The Path of Purification, 5th Edition, Kandy: Buddhist Publication Society, 1991, p. 594, xviii.31. Cited in Jonardon Ganeri, “Attention to Greatness: Buddhaghosa.” What Makes a Philosopher Great? Ed. Stephen Herrington, New York: Routledge, 2018)

  6. Joe Odegaard Avatar

    For what its worth, kitties are outside of history too; in old photographs the people, and the things of the past look different, but the cats always look the same, and that perhaps also shows that cats do not experience time the way we do. I take advantage of this sometimes because when the stupidity of these current years becomes almost unbearable, I can pet one of my cats and pretend it is 1955, and “Ike” is president. It works pretty well, usually, for about 60 seconds.

  7. BV Avatar
    BV

    Great comment, Joe. Cats are outside of history.

  8. BV Avatar
    BV

    Elliot,
    Buddhaghosa is not in my library. I’ll have to do something about that. (But I am back on an Eastern jag: pulled Lanza del Vasto from the shelf yesterday. Ever read him?)
    The quotation you cite is fascinating. At the back of it is of course the anatta/anatman doctrine: there is no self, not in animals, not in us, not in anything. So is Buddhaghosa going Descartes one better and saying that we are just like insentient mechanical dolls?
    That can’t be because the First Noble Truth has it that SARVAM DUKKHAM: all is suffering, all is ill, all in unsatisfactory. But nothing insentient can suffer. The Buddhist view is that there is sentience but that there are no substantial selves, egos, that are sentient.
    So Buddhaghosaq’s comparison is pretty lame.
    Could a Buddhist be a materialist? On materialism it is easy to accommodate the anatman doctrine. But then how distinguish between the sentient and the insentient? Enter the Buddhist materialist panpsychist: all is sentient and sentience is material at bottom!
    For me, sentience refutes materialism. The qualia problem. Nagel’s ‘what it is like.’

  9. BV Avatar
    BV

    Elliot,
    Re: your anecdote, what is your evidence that you were aware of the smoke before you became aware of your awareness of the smoke?
    In my example, the evidence is that the driver had to be aware of the stop lights, etc because he and his vehicle were physically intact.

  10. BV Avatar
    BV

    Elliot,
    Compare these three mental states:
    a) Seeing a tree: purely intentional, no associated qualia
    b) Fearing a wolf: intentional with associated qualia
    c) Feeling nauseous; no intentionality. Qualia only.
    I want to attribute to cats and (some) non-human animals all three types of experience.
    What I want to deny cats is the power to see something as itself.
    When a cat looks at itself in a mirror it sees something, but the thing it sees, even if it sees it as a cat, does not see it as itself!
    But when I see the man BV in a mirror, I typically see that man as myself. But not always. I might seem a man in a mirror with his fly open but not realize that the man I see, who is BV, is myself. Which would explain why my seeing BV with his fly open might lead to no fly buttoning by BV.
    Part of what makes me a spiritual being is my ability to think the I-thought, the ability to identify something as me myself and not merely as me.

  11. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    Bill,
    I don’t have anything written by Buddhaghosa in my library either. All I have is a chapter in What Makes a Philosopher Great? (Ed. Stephen Herrington, New York: Routledge, 2018) In that chapter, Jonardon Ganeri writes about Buddhaghosa’s “attentionalism.” The chapter is entitled “Attention to Greatness: Buddhaghosa.”
    https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781315676999/makes-philosopher-great-stephen-hetherington?refId=a5fc2d30-07c4-46d1-bc67-7bc9e9b3ddbd&context=ubx
    I’d like to read Ganeri’s book “Attention, Not Self.” Here is a review: https://ndpr.nd.edu/reviews/attention-not-self/
    I haven’t read Lanza del Vasto. I’ll add him to my reading list.

  12. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    >>The Buddhist view is that there is sentience but that there are no substantial selves, egos, that are sentient.<< Right. This point occurred to me when I read about Buddhaghosa’s ideas. According to Ganeri, Buddhagosa’s ideas on knowledge suggest the thesis that having an attentive perspective on some state of affairs is sufficient for possessing knowledge concerning that state. In other words, if Jones is attentive to state of affairs s, then Jones knows that s is the case. Let’s call this thesis Attentive Perspectivalism (AP). (I don’t know enough about Buddhaghosa to say confidently that he held AP. But regardless of whether or not he did, AP is an interesting view to consider.) It seems to me that there are problems with AP. Consider two. First, one can be attentive to a situation and nevertheless fail to obtain the truth about it. For example, a monk living in the 3rd century might attend carefully to the position and apparent motion of the Sun, which appears to move around the Earth. The monk is attentive to the appearance of the sun's movement. But it is false that the Sun orbits the Earth. It seems that, according to AP, the monk knows that the Sun orbits the Earth. Does the monk know that the Sun orbits the Earth? It seems obvious that knowledge is factive. That is, truth is a necessary condition for knowledge; if one knows that p, then p is true. Hence, one can argue against AP as follows: 1. If AP is true, then knowledge is not factive. 2. Knowledge is factive. 3. Thus, AP is not true. The supporter of AP might respond that the monk is not sufficiently attentive to the position of the Sun. Were he to have sufficient attention, he would know that the Sun does not orbit the earth. Hence, (1) is false. The supporter might also say that the monk is attentive to the appearance of the Sun's movement, which is sufficient for him to claim to know the following proposition: 'It appears to me that the Sun moves around the earth' or 'I am being appeared-to in a particular way, namely, as if the Sun orbits the earth.' The objector to AP can reply that “attentiveness” is unclear. How attentive does one need to be in order to obtain knowledge? How attentive does the monk need to be in order to know that the Sun doesn't orbit the earth? Second, Buddhaghosa supposedly affirmed the anatta doctrine, which holds that there is no substantial self. As the quotation I cited earlier indicates, he held that man is like a machine, lacking in selfhood. According to the conjunction of AP and the anatta doctrine, there is knowledge without a knower, attentiveness without an attender, awareness without a subject, perspective taking without a perspective taker, and more broadly speaking, epistemic activity without an epistemic agent. This seems implausible.

  13. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    >>Re: your anecdote, what is your evidence that you were aware of the smoke before you became aware of your awareness of the smoke?<< Good question. It seems to me that my evidence is my memory of having been non-attentively aware of the smell of smoke before becoming aware that I was aware of it, plus my memory of seeing the fire, which triggered the realization that I had at that point become aware that I smelled the smoke. But memories are defeasible items of evidence. It is possible that my memory played a trick on me. It’s also possible that my introspective analysis was faulty re: what had occurred in my consciousness. Here’s a similar experience I sometimes have. I live in a community run by a home owners associate (HOA). The HOA arranges for landscapers to care for the yards and common areas in the neighborhood. Sometimes, I’m writing a paper, or grading student papers, and I’m indistinctly aware of the noise of weedwhackers and blowers outside. As I gradually grow discontent with the noisy disturbance, I shift my attention from the paper to the noise, and it occurs to me that I have become aware of my hearing the noise and that the landscapers are working their regular shift in my neighborhood. In this situation, it seems that my evidence that I was aware of the noise before becoming aware of my awareness includes my memory that I was indistinctly aware of the noise, plus my memory of gradually becoming discontent with the disturbance, plus by memory of switching attention from the paper to the noise, which triggers the realization that I have become aware of my awareness of the noise. Here is still another situation. Yesterday, I was working on a paper I've been writing. My wife was nearby, and was speaking to her niece, who lives in Brazil but is planning a trip to Portugal and Spain. My wife visited those countries last summer to see her sister, who lives there. My wife and her niece were speaking in Portuguese. I was not paying attention to the conversation because I was focused on the paper. Later, my wife and I took a walk together, and I mentioned to her in English that I had heard her niece make a comment (in Portuguese) about a city in Brazil, where she lives. In mentioning that point to my wife, I was aware that I had heard her niece's comment. But at the moment I heard the comment, was I aware that I was hearing the comment? After all, I was focused intently on writing the paper. At some point, I heard the comment and translated it into English. But it seems that the first time I focused on what had happened was when I mentioned the comment to my wife a few hours later. Again, maybe I am not analyzing my own conscious activity correctly regarding such situations. There are a lot of factors to make sense of, and I might not be understanding how they all hang together.

  14. BV Avatar
    BV

    Elliot @ 8:11:
    >>According to Ganeri, Buddhagosa’s ideas on knowledge suggest the thesis that having an attentive perspective on some state of affairs is sufficient for possessing knowledge concerning that state. In other words, if Jones is attentive to state of affairs s, then Jones knows that s is the case. Let’s call this thesis Attentive Perspectivalism (AP).<< As you are well aware, the question naturally arises: who is the possessor of the knowledge? Is it the man Jones, a physical object in the physical world, or a proper part of this physical object, his brain perhaps or some proper part of his brain? That won't do for reasons I won't go into now, except to say that physical things and states cannot exhibit intentionality, and knowing is an intentional state. The AP approach, then, must view knowledge and awareness generally as subjectless. Shades of Sartre and Butchvarov. The being-known of a thing or state of affairs is not a relational property of it but a monadic property. This fits with the anatta doctrine. But as you say: >>According to the conjunction of AP and the anatta doctrine, there is knowledge without a knower, attentiveness without an attender, awareness without a subject, perspective taking without a perspective taker, and more broadly speaking, epistemic activity without an epistemic agent. This seems implausible.<< Well said! Alternative views are also hard to swallow. We are in quite the epistemic pickle!

  15. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    >>When a cat looks at itself in a mirror it sees something, but the thing it sees, even if it sees it as a cat, does not see it as itself!<< There are videos on YouTube of cats trying to fight their mirror images. Here’s one such video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/K22l4zOzsI4
    >>Part of what makes me a spiritual being is my ability to think the I-thought, the ability to identify something as me myself and not merely as me.<< Yes, I agree. This is a fascinating topic!

  16. Elliott Avatar
    Elliott

    Bill,
    Regarding those anecdotes I gave, it’s also possible that I am unintentionally reading into those epistemic situations what is not present in them. I might be imposing my own concept-laden ‘narrative’ onto those situations in a way that doesn’t match what is really happening.

  17. BV Avatar
    BV

    Can a cat recognize himself AS himself? I don’t think so. The cat sees something in the mirror, something unfamiliar. But does the cat conceptualize what it sees AS a cat? Not clear. Does the cat conceptualize what it sees AS ITSELF? Even less clear.
    More videos:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmqzAwdZIwk
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGf-kVmqQJE
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NEV6wHUYwr8

Leave a Reply to BV Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *