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Toward the More-Than-Humane: Why People Need To Embrace The Values of Nature

A buffalo stands quietly with its eyes dropping as a brown bird with a red beak and yellow eyes pecks at its right ear
Humans aren't the only ones who do a good turn for others. Just consider the mutualism of oxpeckers and water buffalo. | Helge Wengenroth | Pixabay
To be humane is not enough. We need to recognize the goodness of animals and plants, and to practice their ethical values ourselves.
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The Anthropocene is all about us.

Proposed by the International Union of Geological Sciences as the name for the current epoch, the term references our profoundly destructive impact on the environment.

As we reassess human activity in the present, we need to reexamine words that are etymologically related to "human."

One word needing attention is "humane."

What is notable about this term is that it expresses an ideal, evoking the best in us as human beings. One person may be good at math. Another might be good at athletics. But to be humane is to be good in a more holistic sense, in a way applicable and accessible to all people.

What we need is a more-than-human version of the humane. There are attributes of all animals, not only humans, that are good.

The problem is that this focus on humans implicitly excludes all other life forms from consideration. In fact, it reinforces the artificial distinction that humans have created to separate us from — and elevate us above — everyone else on planet Earth.

What we need is a more-than-human version of the humane. There are attributes of all animals, not only humans, that are good. There is also goodness in plants. Some attributes may be more fully developed in our non-human kin (just as some people are more humane than others). We should consider this expansively inclusive view of goodness when we aspire to be the best we can be.


There's a long tradition of attributing human qualities to non-human animals, who are cast as representations or symbols for those attributes. The lion is said to be courageous; the ant, diligent. These nature-based symbols often derive from observation, but they operate at a level of abstraction that has nothing to do with the animals, let alone our relationship with them.

Proverbs and fables are traditional genres of instruction in which people are the exclusive audience and subject, served by animals merely as a rhetorical device. Sometimes the characterizations can be slanderously inaccurate, especially those of creatures who have inconvenienced people such as wolves and rats.

An adult male lion lies on grass with his head up, gazing out in the distance under the glow of Magic Hour sun
Is a lion truly courageous? Or is that an attribute that humans have attached to the animal simply through observation — but does not reflect the actual nature of the species? | Image by Robert Greene from Pixabay

The terminology used in these genres reduces the qualities of non-human animals to human ways of being. To call a lion courageous may be loosely accurate in terms of animal behavior, but it diminishes what is noble in the lion to the subset of those qualities that are already recognized and valued by people, excluding everything else from consideration.

In other words, the leonine character in a fable may instruct us to be courageous, but we never learn what it would mean to be the best that a lion can be. And we certainly don’t find out from fables what it would mean to be as cooperative as a wolf or to have a rat's expansive sense of reciprocity.

Our speciesism stunts our ethics.

What we need is a new level of human aspiration that takes the more-than-humane as an ideal. This requires us to appreciate the values that all other animals have, and also the values that are found in plants and fungi, and to collect them into a comprehensive description of goodness.

Each species will be good at some things, often better than other creatures (including us). Cheetahs will run faster than sloths. Succulents will be more resilient than ferns. Humans will be better at math than bees (or maybe not). These aptitudes are important to recognize, because only when all of us strive to be the best at what we're good at, and support what others are good at so they can do it well, can the planet flourish as a whole.

A furry honey bee is perched on the yellow flower of a mustard plant, both sitting still against a blue sky backdrp
Certain aptitudes are important to recognize — like humans being better at math than bees. Because only when all of us strive to be the best at what we're good at, and support what others are good at so they can do it well, can the planet flourish as a whole. | PRAKASH SINGH/AFP via Getty Images

However, flourishing also depends on all of us striving to practice the universal values that are found in each and every organism (even if some species or individuals of those species show them more clearly than others, or even if they have a stronger tendency to practice them due to one or another accident of evolutionary history).

If all humans can strive to be humane, then all creatures including humans can strive to realize a greater goodness.

Biologists can support this effort by investigating qualities we may have overlooked in other beings. (For instance, how do oxpeckers and water buffalo find their way to symbiosis? How do termites reach consensus? How do oak trees nurture the land they stand on through their rootedness?)

What is true of macroscopic life also applies to microbes. (Is there an ethical dimension to quorum sensing, in which bacteria manifest a relationship stronger than love for their neighbors?) Adopting these behaviors or attributes of them is not an act of biomimicry, which others nature. It’s simply a matter of recognizing and reabsorbing the collective moral intelligence or wisdom co-evolved by all life on Earth.

We already have plenty to work with, simply as a matter of being in the world and living with other animals and plants and cyanobacteria since the time when all of us shared a common ancestor. Some more-than-human values are latent in proverbs and fables, which derive from traditional ecological knowledge and preserve that knowledge beneath their cultural pretensions. Many more values can be found in the traditional ecological knowledge still active in Indigenous communities, and the ecological knowledge held by all of us who spend time with our non-human kin.


Given the urgency of the situation we’re in, all that we know needs to be collected right now to be interpreted and implemented by philosophers and legal scholars and policymakers. We need a bestiary of more-than-human ethics.

For too long, people have either embraced the toxic implications of social Darwinism as an excuse for eugenics, or treated nature as a pariah for fear that allowing nature to influence our values would make human civilization red in tooth and claw. This is a false dichotomy. Just as we can determine and reach consensus on human goodness by emphasizing the best in our species and excluding the worst, we can do the same when we take all creatures into consideration, and consider ourselves to be one of myriad manifestations of life.

When we do so, we’ll find a much richer set of values for all to aspire to, and we’ll find ways in which to live more compatibly with all the other species on Earth.

The more-than-humane is all around us, awaiting discovery. Embracing the more-than-humane is foundational to how we act in the Anthropocene.

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