Animal Welfare & Human ValuesWilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 1993 M06 24 - 334 páginas As the most populous province in Canada, Ontario is a microcosm of the animal welfare issues which beset Western civilization. The authors of this book, chairman and vice-chairman, respectively, of the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, find themselves constantly being made aware of the atrocities committed in the Society’s jurisdiction. They have been, in turn, puzzled, exasperated and horrified at humanity’s cruelty to our fellow sentient beings. The issues discussed in this book are the most contentious in animal welfare disputes — animal experimentation, fur-farming and trapping, the use of animals for human entertainment and the conditions under which animals are raised for human consumption. They are complex issues and should be thought about fairly and seriously. The authors, standing squarely on the side of the animals, suggest “community” and “belonging” as concepts through which to understand our relationships to other species. They ground their ideas in Wordsworth’s “primal sympathy” and Jung’s “unconscious identity” with the animal realm. The philosophy developed in this book embraces common sense and compromise as the surest paths to the goal of animal welfare. It requires respect and consideration for other species while acknowledging our primary obligations to our fellow humans. |
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... necessary . There are many such persons , but the identity of a number is unknown and some others are perhaps best left unrecognized . There are a number of people , however , whose contributions have been such that we owe them a ...
... necessary cold logic and objective data may be to an impartial consideration of these issues none of them may be resolved by reason and facts alone . At the end of the day solutions can only be found in the refinement of human ...
... necessary through the development of moral education to counter the effects of technology itself . It is undoubtedly true , as ecologists constantly remind us , that we have gone too far , especially since the Industrial Revolution , in ...
... necessary to afford humans the opportunity to develop the skills which led to civilization also obviously had its dark side . Leisure also allowed time for entertainment , sometimes directed toward the very lowest of human appetites ...
... necessary for human success or even as symbols of the ancestral figures from which the tribes thought themselves to be descended . While paleolithic tribes claimed a particular species as their own totemic symbol , the Egyptians went ...
Contenido
1 | |
5 | |
21 | |
45 | |
59 | |
Animal Experimentation The Alternatives | 73 |
Animal Experimentation Legislation and Assessment | 85 |
Hunting Fishing and Fowling | 103 |
Animals in Entertainment Zoos Aquaria and Circuses | 185 |
Of Farms and Factories | 211 |
Companion Animals | 229 |
The Community of Sentient Beings | 243 |
The Philosophy of Animal Rights | 265 |
The Philosophy of Animal Protection | 283 |
Epilogue Ode to Sensibility | 307 |
Select Bibliography | 317 |
Frivolous Fur Veneration and Environmentalism | 123 |
Frivolous Fur Trappers Clubbers and Farmers | 139 |
Animals in Entertainment Racing Riding and Fighting | 161 |
Index | 321 |