"Respecting the state of savage or uncultivated life, man and other animals appear to be very similarly circumstanced; both of them being miserably subject to almost every evil, destitute of the means of palliating them; living in the continual apprehension of immediate starvation, of destruction by their enemies, which swarm around them; of receiving dreadful injuries from the revengeful and malicious feelings of their associates, uncontrolled by laws or by education, and acting as their strength alone dictates; without proper shelter from the inclemencies of the weather; without proper attention and medical or surgical aid in sickness; destitute frequently of fire, of candle-light, and (in man) also of clothing; without amusements or occupations, excepting a few, the chief of which are immediately necessary for their existence, and subject to all the ill consequences arising from the want of them."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Lewis Gompertz, Moral Inquiries on the Situation of Man and of Brutes (1824), pp. 47
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wild_animal_suffering
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Lewis Gompertz
(1783/4 – 2 December 1861) was an English philosopher, writer, inventor, and social reformer. He was best known for his pioneering advocacy of the moral consideration of animals, early veganism, and opposition to animal exploitation. A founding member of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (later the RSPCA), he later established the Animals' Friend Society to promote a more comprehensive ethical stance toward animals. His 1824 treatise, Moral Inquiries on the Situation of Man an
48 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Lewis Gompertz →
Related Quotes
"Y: What are your opinions concerning the propriety of using silk? Z: I disapprove of the act of depriving the living …"
"The force of custom or habits even proverbial; and accordingly we take advantage of the magnified representation in w…"
"Suppose...we reflect on the building of London Bridge, we cannot then help admiring the genius and assiduity of man. …"
"It has been generally, but not always, the custom of naturalists to degrade the powers of dumb animals into mere inst…"
"In order to admire the goodness of God with the greatest force, we should endeavour to reach in imagination the impro…"
"[T]his seems to be still the age of infancy, and baby-like do we cry. This is all made for me! The land and the ocean…"
"[H]owever the state of man may be above that of other animals, if the superiority be owing to his being differently s…"
"[E]very animal has more right to the use of its own body than others have to use it."
"Are [animals] not furnished with most feelings similar to our own? They indisputably evince in an eminent degree most…"
"And though I cannot conceive how any person can shut his eyes to the general state of misery throughout the universe,…"