
Abstract This article explores the ethical boundaries of modern hunting, contrasting biological necessity with recreational "sport." It introduces the "Villainization Paradox," arguing that humans systematically remove natural predators only to use the resulting ecological imbalance to justify the shedding of blood for fun. By applying a disciplined "Internal Compass" to environmental ethics, the work challenges the devaluation of animal life and calls for a superior human standard rooted in empathy and conservation rather than dominance.
