No, but they are the creatures of God, sentient beings, capable of suffering and enjoyment, and entitled to enjoy according to the measure of their capacities.
To believe in the existence of sentient beings is to take into account their feelings, to believe that they have feelings, which may persist when I am not aware of them.
He writes as follows, "We have to observe that men may and do judge remote as well as immediate results to be in themselves desirable, without considering them in relation to the feelings of sentient beings.
That which tends to the misery, or tends to lessen the happiness of sentient beings.
That which tends to the happiness of sentient beings.
Right and wrong exist in the nature of things--in the relation they bear to man, and to sentient beings.
Briggs concluded that a perfectly good and intelligent God could not have created billions of sentient beings, knowing that they were to be eternally miserable.
All our obligations are to each other, and to sentient beings.
Nothing is moral, that does not tend to the well-being of sentient beings.
Nothing is moral that does not tend to the well-being of sentient beings.
But reflection I think shows that neither beauty nor any other quality of inanimate objects can be regarded as good or desirable in itself, out of relation to the perfection or happiness of sentient beings.
But again: we have to observe that men may and do judge remote as well as immediate results to be in themselves good, and such as we ought to seek to realise, without considering them in relation to the feelings of sentient beings.
Her life is the same vitality that stirs all sentient beings.
The Lowest Good consists in love and protection of sentient beings.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sentient beings" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.