Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Raymond Frey

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Died
  
2012

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Raymond Frey


Raymond Frey wwwbgsueducontentdamBGSUcollegeofartsand

Employer
  
Professor of Philosophy Bowling Green State University

Known for
  
Preference utilitarianism

Website
  
Homepage Bowling Green State University

Books
  
Interests and Rights: The Case Against Animals, Rights, Killing and Suffering

Education
  
College of William & Mary

Raymond G. Frey (; 1941–2012) was a Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University, specializing in moral, political and legal philosophy, and author or editor of a number of books, including Interests and Rights: The Case Against Animals (1980), Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide (1998, with Gerald Dworkin and Sissela Bok), and The Oxford Handbook of Animal Ethics (2011, with Tom Beauchamp, eds.).

Contents

Raymond Frey Professor Raymond Frey to conduct reading of his new book Centenary

Biography

Frey obtained his B.A. in philosophy in 1966 from The College of William and Mary, his M.A. in 1968 from the University of Virginia, and his D.Phil. in 1974 from the University of Oxford – where his supervisor was R. M. Hare – for a thesis on "Rules and Consequences as Grounds for Moral Judgment".

David DeGrazia wrote in 1991 that Frey was one of five authors – along with Peter Singer, Tom Regan, Mary Midgley, and Steve Sapontzis – who had made significant philosophical contributions to the work of placing animals within ethical theory.

Frey writes from a preference utilitarian perspective, as does Singer. Preference utilitarianism defines an act as good insofar as it fulfills the preferences (interests) of the greatest number. In his early work, Interests and Rights (1980), Frey disagreed with Singer – who in his Animal Liberation (1975) wrote that the interests of nonhuman animals must be included when judging the consequences of an act – on the grounds that animals have no interests. Frey argued that interests are dependent on desire, and that one cannot have a desire without a corresponding belief. He argued further that animals have no beliefs because they are unable to comprehend the concept of a belief (that is, they are unable to hold a second-order belief: a belief about a belief), which he argues requires language: "If someone were to say, e.g. 'The cat believes that the door is locked,' then that person is holding, as I see it, that the cat holds the declarative sentence 'The door is locked' to be true; and I can see no reason whatever for crediting the cat or any other creature which lacks language, including human infants, with entertaining declarative sentences." He concludes that animals have no interests.

Counter-arguments include that first-order beliefs may be held in the absence of second-order ones – that is, a non-human animal or human infant might hold a belief while failing to understand the concept of belief — and that human beings could not have developed language in the first place without some pre-verbal beliefs. Frey has since rejected some of his early conclusions. The importance of Interests and Rights, according to DeGrazia, lay in its rigorous treatment of the problem of animal minds and moral status.

Selected publications

Books
  • with Tom Beauchamp (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Animal Ethics. Oxford University Press, 2011
  • with Christopher W. Morris (eds.). Value, Welfare, and Morality. Cambridge University Press, 1994
  • with Christopher W. Morris (eds.). Liability and Responsibility: Essays in Law and Morals. Cambridge University Press, 1991
  • Rights, Killing and Suffering: Moral Vegetarianism and Applied Ethics. Blackwell, 1985
  • Utility and Rights. Blackwell, 1984.
  • Rights, Killing and Suffering. Blackwell, 1983
  • Interests and Rights: The Case Against Animals. Oxford University Press, 1980
  • Papers
  • "Medicine, Animal Experimentation, and the Moral Problem of Unfortunate Humans," Social Philosophy and Policy 13 (1996): 118-211
  • What has sentiency to do with the possession of rights?" in David A. Paterson and Richard D. Ryder (eds.), Animals' Rights: A Symposium. Centaur Press, 1979.
  • References

    Raymond Frey Wikipedia