I also argue for the importance of animals on other views, including rights-based theories, contractualism, virtue ethics and special obligations in another post here.
This post combines two comments I made for Animal Welfare vs Global Health Debate Week, with some additional content and editing.
I think there's a decent case for nonhuman animals mattering substantially in expectation on non-hedonic views, including desire and preference views:
Now, there's an intuitive case for humans mattering much more that I expect people to often have in mind: I'd guess that many humans are much more willing to endure suffering or endorse undergoing suffering, including fairly intense suffering, for their children and other goals than other animals are for anything.[3] So human desires/preferences might often be much stronger than other animals', if we normalize each individual's desires/preferences by their own desires/preferences about their own suffering, perhaps adjusting for differences in some measure of suffering intensity.
This has some directly intuitive appeal, but my best guess is that this involves some wrong or unjustifiable assumptions, and may even have morally repugnant or at least counterintuitive implications between humans.
To be clear, this also undermines a case one might want to make for animals mattering a lot on desire and preference views, e.g. using the fact that humans tend to care about their own suffering a lot, too.
I wrote more here on the possibility of more sophisticated versions of desires and preferences in other animals.
There are some arguments for weighing ~proportionally with neuron counts:
Moral weights proportional to neuron counts may still support animal welfare over global health, but animal welfare is probably less cost-effective on the margin now than in the cited research, and we still have to worry about weighing different gains, e.g. how bad is nest deprivation for an egg-laying hen relative to her welfare range? I won't take a position either way here about what's best on the margin using moral weights proportional to neuron counts.
Maybe with some exceptions for some animals, but I expect this not to apply to factory farmed animals, whose circumstances are not conducive to forming such desires/preferences.
Also, I'd imagine it's actually acute suffering — e.g. panic in response to danger to their children — that would drive an animal to endure severe but less acute suffering.
Felt desires: desires we feel. They are often classified as one of two types, either a) appetitive — or incentive and typically conducive to approach or consummatory behaviour and towards things — like in attraction, hunger, cravings and anger, or b) aversive — and typically conducive to avoidance and away from things — like in pain, fear, disgust and again anger (Hayes et al., 2014, Berridge, 2018, and on anger as aversive and appetitive, Carver & Harmon-Jones, 2009, Watson, 2009 and Lee & Lang, 2009). However, the actual approach/consummatory or avoidance behaviour is not necessary to experience a felt desire, and we can overcome our felt desires or be constrained from satisfying them.
More here.
Perhaps whoever claims the highest infinities at stake would dominate under some common lexicographic order, as modelled in Russell and Isaacs, 2021, or with surreal numbers as in Chen and Rubio, 2020.