{"id":137996,"date":"2025-11-16T14:40:08","date_gmt":"2025-11-16T14:40:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/137996\/"},"modified":"2025-11-16T14:40:08","modified_gmt":"2025-11-16T14:40:08","slug":"the-last-frontier-of-empathy-why-we-still-struggle-to-see-ourselves-as-animals-environment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/137996\/","title":{"rendered":"The last frontier of empathy: why we still struggle to see ourselves as animals | Environment"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">At first light in Massachusetts bay, a North Atlantic right whale threads the shallows with her calf tucked into her slipstream. She surfaces, and the V-shaped breath \u2013 two brief feathers of vapor \u2013 vanishes in the cold air.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The calf is roughly three months old, about the length of a small truck, still learning the rhythm: rise, breathe, tuck back into mother\u2019s wake. They are doing what every mammal mother and baby do: moving toward food and a safer place.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Across the same water, a different logic hums. Tankers and container ships steer by timetables set by a faceless executive an ocean away. Boston\u2019s approach lanes have been shifted once to reduce whale collisions, but the traffic still keeps human time: fixed routes, double-digit knots, arrivals measured in profit and delay.<\/p>\n<p>I am the river and the river is meM\u0101ori saying<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Seasonal speed limits exist, yet large vessels <a href=\"https:\/\/oceana.org\/press-releases\/oceana-finds-most-boats-speeding-in-slow-zones-designed-to-protect-critically-endangered-north-atlantic-right-whales\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">routinely ignore them<\/a> as commerce sets the pace to satisfy us as we collectively demand fast shipping. We should have what we want when we want it, shouldn\u2019t we?<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Many of us say we love whales, but for this endangered species, already down to only a few hundred individuals, this yielding to human desires can mean vanishing entirely.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Every threat they face \u2013 speed, noise, nets \u2013 traces back to the same root assumption: that our needs matter more than theirs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">This belief has a name: human exceptionalism. It is the conviction that humans are not just different from other life, but morally superior to it \u2013 and therefore entitled to first claim on space, speed, resources and survival.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">This belief underwrites what we eat and how we raise it; the habitats we clear for housing, highways and Dollar Generals; the way we extract, ship and burn; the emissions we send into the atmosphere, warming oceans and melting glaciers. Exceptionalism is so embedded in daily life that we barely feel it operating. It is a system constantly humming in the background \u2013 efficient, invisible yet devastatingly consequential.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">It is a sobering thought, for we could use our powerful brains to choose otherwise.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Many cultures have modeled another stance. For the M\u0101ori of Aotearoa (New Zealand), people are kin with rivers, mountains and forests through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/football\/2021\/jul\/09\/whakapapa-maori-belief-helping-england-find-team-spirit\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">whakapapa<\/a> (genealogy). The saying \u201cKo au te awa, ko te awa ko au\u201d \u2013 \u201cI am the river and the river is me\u201d \u2013 captures that reciprocity.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In Lakota philosophy, Mit\u00e1kuye Oy\u00e1s\u2019i\u014b \u2013 \u201call are related\u201d \u2013 frames animals, plants, waters and winds as relatives rather than resources.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In the Kumulipo, the 2,100-line Hawaiian creation chant, life emerges from P\u014d \u2013 the deep darkness \u2013 and the humble coral polyp is honored as an ancient ancestor, anchoring a spiritual genealogy that binds people to the natural world.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Westerners could admit at any point that we have misread our place in the cosmos and shift toward this older, still living worldview: humans not as commanders of the natural world but as kin, interconnected equals among other beings and systems.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">This suggestion might sound sentimental and naive in a political moment when even extending compassion to other humans meets resistance. Refugees are being turned away at ports of entry \u2013 grim proof of how easily our empathy falters. But new ideas are hard precisely because they threaten the story that keeps our lives coherent. It is natural for our minds to leap to defend old ways before testing new ones.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Psychologist Erik Erikson, writing in the shadow of the world wars, described our human tendency towards pseudospeciation \u2013 the desire to split the world into \u201cus\u201d and \u201cnot us\u201d \u2013 in order to justify mistreatment. Pseudospeciation grants us the psychological distance to degrade other beings we deem inferior without troubling our conscience. That psychological distance becomes a powerful permission slip.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">But humans are capable of self-reflection and growth, and I believe this point in the Earth\u2019s history requires us to use those abilities and begin to question the ways we center human experience. In fact, our very ability to use the best of our social human traits \u2013 and advanced scientific knowledge \u2013 could alter the course of life on Earth.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">When I studied anthropology in college, I had a professor with a crooked finger \u2013 allegedly from a monkey bite. He challenged us to see our own animal behavior, to recognize the 98.8% DNA similarities with chimpanzees, and the 98.7% similarity with bonobos. He advised us to be suspicious of our alleged altruism, and to be aware of our own animal nature.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">I remember going out to the bar that semester, watching men and women interact and thinking: oh. Once you start seeing yourself as an animal, it\u2019s hard to stop.<\/p>\n<p>The real problem of humanity is [that] we have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions, and godlike technologyEO Wilson<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Once, eating dinner on my front porch, my two beloved dogs approached me. My shepherd mix, Nemo, tried to steal bread from my plate. \u201cNo,\u201d I said angrily, turning my body. I recognized resource guarding behavior in myself, a glorified dog growling over a bowl of food. I had to laugh.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">And nothing \u2013 nothing \u2013 connected me with my animal nature more than giving birth to my daughters. In those hours, I understood instinct as something ancient and physical, unmediated by thought. My body knew what to do before I did; I was acting from a primal, powerful place.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">And so it sometimes baffles me to look at my life, safely ensconced in my climate-controlled home, buying and selling things on the internet, buffered from the weather and the wild, estranged from my origins in the natural world. My comforts arrive at the tap of a screen; the true costs are distant and invisible. As biologist EO Wilson observed: \u201cThe real problem of humanity is the following: we have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions, and godlike technology.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Humans have long been fundamentally uncomfortable with the idea of significant animal intelligence and emotion, or the humility of viewing ourselves as animals.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In his lesser-known work, The Expression of the Emotions in Man and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/world\/animals\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" data-component=\"auto-linked-tag\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Animals<\/a> (1872), Charles Darwin argued that human feelings and their outward signs are evolutionary continuities shared with other animals. Those ideas were later pushed aside by 20th-century behaviorism and the taboo against \u201canthropomorphism\u201d. Only with the rise of ethology (the science of animal behavior) and cognitive neuroscience did Darwin\u2019s continuity thesis regain daylight.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Primatologist Frans de Waal long argued that Darwin was right: there is no principled boundary around \u201chuman\u201d emotion and intelligence. He named the refusal to see this \u201canthropodenial\u201d: a blindness to humanlike traits in other animals, and animal-like traits in us.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Why are we so unwilling to acknowledge our own animal nature? Perhaps because it would shift nearly all the ways we human animals move in our lives. It would threaten our self-concept.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">I am ready to admit that humans may not be the sparkling, superior, bright, moral species we believe ourselves to be. We may not have the divine-purpose hall pass we so desperately want to believe in. We may have to admit that in addition to our better social traits we are also greedy, territorial, tribal and violent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">After all, there is only one species recklessly destroying the very planet it needs to survive.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Now a professor of writing, with no broken fingers to show for it, I have often taught Shirley Jackson\u2019s story The Lottery. In it, a small town gathers for an annual ritual, drawing slips of paper from a box to determine who among them will be stoned to death \u2013 a sacrifice so enmeshed in their tradition and identity that no one remembers why it began. The horror lies not only in the act itself but in the town\u2019s calm acceptance of it, the ease with which cruelty becomes customary.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">One of the aspects my students respond to most is the townspeople\u2019s reliance on tradition: we should stone a person each year because that is what we have always done. The implication for our moment is hard to miss: sometimes the old ways of thinking must change, especially when we know they have helped usher in what scientists call the Earth\u2019s sixth mass extinction.<\/p>\n<p>[Human] exceptionalism confuses evolutionary human difference with superiority<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Some who champion exceptionalism say humans hold a unique moral status and are the only full rights-holders; many ground that in religion, believing we are made in God\u2019s image, and thus given dominion over the natural world. Others point to our brains \u2013 capable of abstract reason, language, cumulative culture \u2013 as proof that, when trade-offs arise, humans should get priority status.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">The counterargument is simpler than it sounds. From the jump, exceptionalism confuses evolutionary human difference with superiority. Uniqueness has never equaled higher moral rank. If it did, the bioluminescent lantern fish, or even the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.opb.org\/television\/programs\/oregon-field-guide\/article\/oregon-humongous-fungus\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"> 2,400-year-old honey mushroom<\/a> located in Oregon\u2019s Malheur national forest with its vast, interconnected network of mycelium over 2,000 acres, might be a contender.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">With this logic, as some point out, if an alien species with superior intelligence and complexity arrived on planet Earth, humans would need to consent to being eaten.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">If we truly believed in the intelligence of the living world, how might we live differently? What would it mean to build, farm and move across the planet with kinship, not conquest, as our organizing principle? What would a different world \u2013 one that works with nature, and not against it \u2013 look like?<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">While on assignment to write about <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/environment\/2022\/mar\/23\/florida-panthers-endangered-need-to-survive\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Florida panthers and wildlife corridors<\/a>, I learned that humans actually want better outcomes for wildlife. I met ranchers who leave gaps in their fences so panthers can pass through their land unharmed, and developers who leave borders along the edges of a neighborhood for wildlife passage \u2013 people who might never call themselves environmentalists but still act out of a quiet sense of stewardship. Yet, road construction and planning rarely take this bipartisan desire into account.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">But tides are turning in some places. The <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/environment\/2022\/apr\/09\/wildlife-bridge-california-highway-mountain-lions\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Wallis Annenberg wildlife crossing <\/a>over Los Angeles\u2019s US Route 101 is under construction, while Utah\u2019s Parleys canyon overpass has already cut wildlife\u2013vehicle collisions dramatically, proof that strategic compassion and consideration works.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">When I asked the environmental writer Ben Goldfarb about human exceptionalism and policy momentum in the United States, he was measured: \u201cI see only faint signs of progress \u2026 the political and regulatory mainstream still seems to consider the concept threatening.\u201d Goldfarb acknowledges that the concept of decentering humans still seems to be \u201cpolitical anathema\u201d in the US.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cEven the idea of granting the Great Salt Lake the right not to be sucked dry by irrigators was so threatening to conservative Utah legislators,\u201d he told me, \u201cthat they <a href=\"https:\/\/www.counterpunch.org\/2024\/04\/21\/the-great-salt-lake-is-disappearing-so-utah-bans-rights-of-nature\/\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">passed a law<\/a> preventing personhood from being granted to any plant, animal or ecosystem.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">That is not to dismiss the growing \u201crights of nature\u201d movement \u2013 often led by Indigenous communities \u2013 that has made meaningful strides. Goldfarb cites the Yurok tribe\u2019s declaration recognizing the inherent rights of the Klamath River as a crucial step in advancing dam removal efforts. But for now, Goldfarb says, those efforts remain exceptions to the rule; within most political and regulatory circles, extending rights to nature is still treated as a radical act rather than an ethical evolution.<\/p>\n<p>Colonialism is \u2026 subjugating, and reducing to muteness, an entire universe of beings \u2013 animals, trees, volcanoes, nutmegsAmitav Ghosh<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In the legal arena, the rights of nature have leapt from thought experiment to precedent. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/world\/2019\/nov\/30\/saving-the-whanganui-can-personhood-rescue-a-river\" data-link-name=\"in body link\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">New Zealand\u2019s Whanganui River<\/a> and Colombia\u2019s Atrato River now hold legal personhood; Spain\u2019s constitutional court has upheld Europe\u2019s first ecosystem personhood for the Mar Menor Lagoon; Canada\u2019s Magpie River enjoys comparable standing through municipal and Indigenous resolutions. These are not a full move toward more compassionate regulations \u2013 but glimmers and proof that the concepts are real and growing in influence.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Goldfarb, who has written about roadside ecology and the lives of beavers, also offered the path forward for storytellers: \u201cCentering animals as literary characters in their own right is both a way of honoring non-humans and, I hope, enthralling readers.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">In his book Is a River Alive? Robert Macfarlane notes how ordinary it is for a company to have rights while a river has none, and argues that story and statute can repair the mismatch. \u201cOur fate flows with that of rivers,\u201d he writes, \u201cand always has.\u201d Writer Amitav Ghosh has been vocal about decentering the human experience, offering that literature can help \u201crestore agency and voice to nonhumans\u201d. In his book of parables, The Nutmeg\u2019s Curse, Ghosh emphasizes the colonial tendencies of humans, writing that \u201cColonialism is \u2026 subjugating, and reducing to muteness, an entire universe of beings \u2013 animals, trees, volcanoes, nutmegs.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">These currents \u2013 court rulings, treaties, charters and a restoried public imagination \u2013 show that adopting a more-than-human ethic is not naive; it\u2019s already happening.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">I began writing this piece the week Jane Goodall died \u2013 a coincidence that felt oddly fitting. In the tributes that followed, her words shone with what she had been telling us all along: that peace requires humility, and that we are not above the rest of life.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">\u201cIn what terms should we think of these beings,\u201d she asked, reflecting on the primates she studied, \u201cnonhuman yet possessing so very many humanlike characteristics? How should we treat them? Surely we should treat them with the same consideration and kindness as we show to other humans; and as we recognize human rights, so too should we recognize the rights of the great apes?\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Policy will always be contested terrain. And when policy stalls in times like these, we can still move thoughtfully in our own lives: swapping lawns for native plants, skipping pesticides, feeding birds, keeping cats indoors, buying less, backing wildlife corridors, supporting dark-sky ordinances during migration, moving to a more plant-based diet.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">None of this is heroic, but all of it counts. Each step we take lessens suffering in the world and broadens the circle of consideration \u2013 not with perfection, but with sincerity.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">We are nearly out of time to do so, but not out of choices. The whale asks for more space. The river asks for standing. The tern asks for habitat and room. We can give it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"dcr-130mj7b\">Illustrations by Jensine Eckwall<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"At first light in Massachusetts bay, a North Atlantic right whale threads the shallows with her calf tucked&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":137997,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[22],"tags":[273,111,139,69,147],"class_list":{"0":"post-137996","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-environment","8":"tag-environment","9":"tag-new-zealand","10":"tag-newzealand","11":"tag-nz","12":"tag-science"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/137996","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=137996"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/137996\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/137997"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=137996"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=137996"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/nz\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=137996"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}