Underwatertimes.com News Service - February 22, 2010 20:57 EST
thomas white

Loyola Marymount University professor Thomas White insists dolphins are nonhuman persons

Are dolphins nonhuman persons? Loyola Marymount University professor Thomas White insists they are. He presented his research at the American Association for the Advancement of Science conference in San Diego on Sunday.

White, the author of "In Defense of Dolphins: The New Frontier," spoke on a panel on the "Ethical Implications of Dolphin Intelligence: Dolphins as Nonhuman Persons."

White and other experts discussed scientific research showing that dolphins are highly intelligent, and, like humans, appear to be self-conscious, unique individuals with personalities, memories and a sense of self. They are vulnerable to pain and suffering and experience fear, dread and grief, the research suggests.

"Dolphins should be considered nonhuman persons," says White, "because they have the kind of consciousness that, in the past, we thought was unique to our species. They're not just aware of the world around them, but they have the ability to look inside and say 'I.' They have a sense of choice and will.'"

Because of these attributes, White believes, dolphins should be given "moral standing" as individuals. Humans have always believed that moral standing as an individual entitles them to special treatment. White says dolphins need to be treated in a similar way.

If that happens, certain human fishing practices would need to change, as would policies regarding the hundreds of captive dolphins used in entertainment facilities.

"Every year an estimated 300,000 dolphins die around the world, caught by commercial fishermen searching for tuna. Thousands more die in the annual Japanese drive hunts," says White.

White, who holds a doctorate in philosophy, is the Conrad N. Hilton Chair in Business Ethics and the director of the Center for Ethics and Business at LMU. He has been a scientific adviser to the Wild Dolphin Project, a research organization studying a community of Atlantic spotted dolphins in the Bahamas for more than for 25 years.

He is also a fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics and served as U.S. ambassador to the United Nation's Year of the Dolphin Program in 2007-08.