Abstract
This paper seeks to intervene in environmental ethics and
social epistemology. Within a predominant strand of environmental
ethics, one witnesses accounts based on nonhumans’ ability to suffer,
and consequently, the passivity of nonhumans. On the other hand,
social epistemology is often not social enough insofar as it does not
include nonhumans. Seminal accounts of epistemic injustice often
conceal or exclude the possibility that nonhumans can be subjects
of knowledge and victims of epistemic injustice because of an anthropocentric bias that maintains propositional language is a necessary condition for knowledge. By presenting a non-anthropocentric,
corporeal epistemology, this paper reveals a more affirmative account
of nonhumans as epistemic agents with tacit, embodied knowledge.
To prevent epistemic depreciation turning into ethical indifference
or wrongdoing, this paper focuses on whether it is possible to commit epistemic injustices against nonhumans. In particular, this paper
argues that humans can commit fourth-order epistemic exclusion, testimonial injustice, and testimonial smothering against nonhumans.