I am working on the last parts of my dissertation and have been wondering about the concepts of human and animal. It is commonly observed in animal studies that the concept of human is constituted through the expulsion of the animal. That is, humans are humans because they are not animals. Obviously, it is recognized on some levels–even in the least thoughtful of people–that humans are, nonetheless, animal in some respect: we are living creatures in more or less the same way. However, humans are nonetheless different than animals and this (minor) difference makes all the difference in the world. Thus, if a creature can speak, it is human; if a creature cannot speak, it is animal; if a creature is made in the image of God, it is human; if a creature is not made in the image of God, it is animal. Those working in animal studies like to “complicate” this distinction. After all, the internal diversity of the two concepts suggests a greater range of difference within the category of animal than between the categories of human and animal. For instance, estimates range from between three and over thirty million distinct species captured within the category of animal (ranging from single-celled organisms, to sponges, to chickens, to gorillas), but only one species captured within the category of human. This strategy seems like a failure to me and I think it has to be with the more or less disavowed category of the pet in animal studies. It is true that animal studies scholars are disproportionately in support of animal rights as a moral theory and, thus, are disproportionately concerned with the fate of animals used for food. Gary Francione, for instance, likes to point out that just as there is no meaningful distinction between fur and leather, there is likewise no meaningful distinction between a dog and a pig. The animal rights position tends to obliterate differences between animals and, thus, between humans and animals. While this is powerful move in moral theory, it is a strange and weak move when we look at animals (or, better yet, human/animal relations) sociologically or anthropologically. (Having said this, the sociology and anthropology of human/animal relations remains comparatively underdeveloped relative to the moral theory.)
The thought that I am having difficulty expressing is that the distinction between human and animal is only marginally worth preserving, but only because we, as sociologists, tend to disavow the boundary concept between the two: viz., pets. This disavowal is clearly obvious in the only major survey of the sociology of animals, Adrian Franklin’s Animals and Modern Culures, where his analysis of pets is, in essence, that modernity creates conditions wherein intimate contact between humans breaks down, but that this intimate contact is nonetheless desired. As a result, animals become surrogate humans. Pets are both animal and human, but it is this very lack of distinction between the two categories that troubles Franklin: pets are animals, we are mistaken when we believe that they are human. He may be right, but I doubt it.
What needs to be done is to study the domain of the home more carefully (the history and sociology of the family/home tends to ignore pets, domesticated animals and vermin), especially as a site of domination. As Yi-Fu Tuan points out, pets (and topiaries) are the product of dominance and affection. It is at this point that we would want to also bring in children, servants, slaves, and parents.
I started drawing a diagram in my notebook today, attempting to make sense of these distinctions. I’ve reproduced it here. My handwriting is terrible! Obviously, I don’t intend for the diagram to be definitive, but suggestive.

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Man(kind) may not be the “measure of all things”as D.H. Lawrence once suggested and psychologist Erik Erikson points out that we are, in fact, rather “unfinished” human beings: “The drives man is born with are not instincts…unlike animals they do not carry in themselves the patterns of completion…as an animal, man is nothing…man’s inborn instincts are drive fragments to be assembled…during a prolonged childhood.” (And both Nietzsche and D.H.Lawrence would have agreed!) Speaking of the importance of the “animal psyche”in our lives,psychologist James Hillman long argued for the need to evoke the animal as psychic presence:” I have been trying to foster self-recognition of human being as animal being.” Human constructs will always tend to point out differences that lead to reasons for “separation” in human-animal relationships rather than acknowledging a mutual dependence or “sympathy of all things.”
Humans are human because they are not governed by instinctual determinism…the patterns of completion that animals possess; so we have freedom, the ability to choose, as part of our human nature; and humans are unique in that they possess that universal human trait called “blushing” which Darwin referred to as “the most peculiar and the most human of all expressions.” The Russian philosopher Vladimir Solovyov placed “shame”, the mother of the blush, at the heart of his philosophical anthropology and ethics…”the true spiritual root of all human good and the distinctive characteristic of man as a moral being.” Shame leads to guilt and guilt safeguards human conscience…natural shame being the root of moral intelligence; I would strongly argue(although this may seem quite a leap for some of us) that the source of much negative feeling and “blindness” towards animal cruelty in our present society is precisely rooted in the absence of a sense of healthy shame and moral intelligence…even though shame is, in fact, an innate, hardwired, genetically determined mechanism; so as humans we, as a result, become less than human if we fail to develop this affect system; and of course other “humans” will be potential victims as well as innocent animals of all kinds and in every situation. As Mark Twain once observed:”Man is the only animal who blushes or needs to…”
I meant to say..”negative feeling” towards animals…
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