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El. knyga: Animal Rights: Moral Theory and Practice

3.75/5 (24 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780230245112
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Apr-2016
  • Leidėjas: Palgrave Macmillan
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780230245112
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In this 2nd edition, the author has substantially revised his book throughout, updating the moral arguments and adding a chapter on animal minds. Importantly, rather than being a polemic on animal rights, this book is also a considered and imaginative evaluation of moral theory as explored through the issue of animal rights.

Recenzijos

'Those concerned with animal ethics owe a debt of gratitude to Mark Rowlands. He has written what is without doubt the best defense of animal rights from a contractarian position, or perhaps from any position. Rowlands writes in an admirably clear and engaging manner, guaranteed to lure the reader into joining the spirited conversation.' - Susan J. Armstrong, Professor Emerita, Department of Philosophy, Humboldt State University, Arcata, Canada





'Philosophers, in particular, and those interested in animal rights issues, in general, should be grateful for the publication of this book for several reasons. First, familiar defenses of the animal rights position offered by Peter Singer and Tom Regan are examined anew, such that even those who are very familiar with these defenses see them in a new light. Second, the more recent debate in virtue ethics regarding treatment of animals (between Rosalind Hursthouse and Roger Scruton) is treated very insightfully. Third, Rowlands develops his own powerful version of a contractarian account of animal rights based on Rawlsian principles. And fourth, he also treats the animal rights issue in novel terms in light of recent debates in philosophy of mind and in relation to a fantastic thought experiment wherein brilliant aliens start farming and eating human beings because of their intellectual inferiority. This is not a book to be ignored!' - Daniel A. Dombrowski, Professor of Philosophy, Seattle University, USA

Animal Rights and Moral Theories
1(7)
Arguing for One's Species
8(23)
The Independence Day scenario
8(3)
The opening gambit: how to argue (morally) with aliens
11(5)
The alien response
16(10)
Thou art the man
26(3)
Who speaks for wolf?
29(2)
Utilitarianism and Animals: Peter Singer's Case for Animal Liberation
31(27)
Utilitarianism I: definition of utility
32(4)
Utilitarianism II: maximizing utility
36(6)
Problems with utilitarianism
42(6)
Utilitarianism and justice
48(3)
Rule utilitarianism
51(2)
Utilitarianism and animals
53(5)
Tom Regan: Animal Rights as Natural Rights
58(40)
Subjects-of-a-life
59(2)
Inherent value
61(2)
Inherent value as a theoretical postulate
63(3)
The respect principle
66(1)
The harm principle
67(1)
Moral rights
68(3)
The miniride principle
71(3)
The worse-off principle
74(3)
Regan on vegetarianism
77(9)
Inherent value is mysterious
86(3)
Inherent value is ad hoc
89(4)
Inherent value is unnecessary
93(5)
Virtue Ethics and Animals
98(20)
The concept of virtue?
98(2)
Virtue ethics and animals: Scruton versus Hursthouse
100(13)
The virtue of mercy
113(4)
Conclusion
117(1)
Contractarianism and Animal Rights
118(58)
Contractarianism and moral status
118(5)
Two forms of contractarianism
123(6)
Contractarianism and animal rights: the orthodox view
129(2)
Rawls and contractarianism
131(11)
The original position revisited
142(5)
The original position and animal rights
147(5)
Hobbesian remnants
152(6)
Other objections
158(4)
Contractarianism and vegetarianism
162(12)
Conclusion
174(2)
Animal Minds
176(43)
Introduction: morality and mentality
176(5)
HOT and the rejection of animal consciousness
181(2)
The problem of regress
183(4)
The holism of the mental
187(6)
An unsuccessful refutation
193(3)
Attributing content
196(13)
Belief and truth
209(2)
How animals can refer
211(6)
Conclusion
217(2)
Notes 219(8)
Bibliography 227(4)
Index 231
MARK ROWLANDS is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Miami, USA. He is author of a dozen books, translated into more than twenty languages. These include The Body in Mind (1999), The Nature of Consciousness (2001), Animals Like Us (2002) and Body Language (2006). His autobiography, The Philosopher and the Wolf was published in 2008.