capable of rational decisions, the bioegalitarians also list autopoiesis, the
 self-organisation characteristic of living systems, among the forms of
 autonomous behaviour. On this basis they extend to them too the
 validity of the categorical imperative: never consider living beings as
 means, but only as the ends of our decisions. Does what we do under
 the imperative of biological necessity, e.g., eating them, form an
 exception? The bioegalitarians are happy to start a debate on this issue.
 ‘Their starting point is usually that a being with ethical self-awareness
 has good reason not to behave according to the pressure of biological
 necessity, but instead in the spirit of the unconditional respect of life.
 Yet many claim that the bioegalitarian position leads to impossible
 conclusions. It is the environmentalists themselves who hurry to draw
 attention to this. For the adherents of the school called Land ethics by
 Aldo Leopold, it is obvious that for environmentally conscious thinkers,
 i.e., those who wish to preserve the unity, wholeness and beauty of life
 on Earth, the utmost ethical value cannot reside in living individuals,
 but only in their associations or the entirety of the living world itself.”
 For the condition of the continuation and flourishing of life on Earth
 is not the wellbeing or survival of individual organisms, but rather the
 endurance of the spontaneous order of coexistence. The coexistence of
 the species is determined by their place in the food chain, i.e., by how
 they devour each other. Life does not respect life but rather ceaselessly
 destroys and creates it. If the interests of the ecosystem come into
 conflict with those of a living being or even a species, the former has
 absolute priority, even if a multitude of individuals have to perish for
 it.°° Bioegalitarians and ecocentrists are in heated debate on the issue
 of hunting, for instance. The former condemn it as a sinful passion, while
 the latter believe it to be not only part of man’s natural behaviour; it is
 also indispensable from the perspective of maintaining the balance of
 the ecosystem. Where man has remained the only apex predator, there
 he has to intervene to, where necessary, thin or deplete an overgrown
 population. In contrast, where spontaneous natural self-correction is
 functioning, human measures in service of the wellbeing of individuals
 is forbidden. ‘The decisions of the ethical committee of Yellowstone Park
 are a good example of this approach: they prohibit the rescue of a bison
 fallen into a ravine or the curing of the eye disease decimating the wild