Additional information
| Full Title | Animal Rights |
|---|---|
| Author(s) | Patience Coster |
| Edition | |
| ISBN | 9781448871919, 9781448871841 |
| Publisher | Rosen Central |
| Format | PDF and EPUB |
Original price was: $32.75.$9.82Current price is: $9.82.
Access Animal Rights Now. Discount up to 90%
| Full Title | Animal Rights |
|---|---|
| Author(s) | Patience Coster |
| Edition | |
| ISBN | 9781448871919, 9781448871841 |
| Publisher | Rosen Central |
| Format | PDF and EPUB |
Millions of species of animals inhabit the planet; humans affect all. Humans use animals for food, entertainment, companionship, and more. Readers explore some of the difficult questions surrounding animal rights. History of how the human/animal relationship has evolved and what the future might bring is also provided.
Original price was: $13.99.$3.50Current price is: $3.50.
Access Animal Rights Now. Discount up to 90%
| Full Title | Animal Rights |
|---|---|
| Author(s) | Mark Rowlands |
| Edition | |
| ISBN | 9780262380300, 9780262549400 |
| Publisher | The MIT Press |
| Format | PDF and EPUB |
A fresh view of animals and what we owe them. Do animals have moral standing? Do they count, morally speaking? In Animal Rights, Mark Rowlands argues that they do and explores the implications of this idea. He identifies three different waves in animal rights writing. The first wave was defined by a traditional dispute between utilitarianism (represented by Peter Singer) and rights-based approaches (represented by Tom Regan) to ethics. The second wave was defined by an expansion in a conception of ethics, which saw utilitarian and rights-based approaches supplemented by other ethical traditions, including contractualism, virtue ethics, and care ethics. The third wave was defined by an expansion in our conception of animals, driven by exciting new developments in the field of comparative psychology. Each of these waves had ramifications for how we understand the moral status of animals, but, this book argues, and reinforces, the core idea that animals deserve moral respect. In earlier waves, discussions of animal ethics had been focused on the issue of animal suffering. But the third wave is defined by the idea that animals are far more than merely sufferers or enjoyers of experiences but are instead authors of their own lives: creatures capable of choosing how to live, shaped by a conception of their life and how they would like it to go. Rowlands writes that, no matter what moral theory you choose, the most plausible version of that theory entails that animals have moral standing and that our obligations to them are far more substantial than many of us care to acknowledge.