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4elise
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I started to answer this post and found that I was sounding snarky and decided to erase what I wrote and start again. So I went looking for someone who said it better, especially because you are someone with a theology background - I would hope you would consider reading this article - scu.edu/ethics/publications/submitted/Ramirez/FaithSeekingFood.htmlThen your parish priest needs to study up some more on Aquinas. Emotions are an embodiment of the rational appetite. Animals, having only a sensitive soul, do not have the element of Reason necessary for emotion.
An animal may have a passion, a sensitive embodiment, but not an emotion. Aquinas deemed this an estimative power shaped by instinct, not the cognitive power shaped by intellect.
“What capacities must a being have if we are to make it the proper object of moral concern?” believers should respond with “theos-rights.” As a result, all beings that possess theos-rights would be proper objects of moral concern. But this argument is not about humans only: God has rights over all of creation, and no Christian can doubt that animals are part of creation. Animals, then, must possess theos-rights; animals must be proper objects of moral concern and obligation. Like humans, “animals can be wronged because their creator can be wronged in his creation” (Linzey, 135).