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Zusatztext Our relation to animals is among the most important and! at the same time! the most puzzling moral questions of our time: We love our pets and spend countless hours in zoos and aquariums while allowing the disappearance of too many species and the suffering to too many animals. By bringing cutting-edge psychology to systematically bear on this moral question! Kasperbauer's superb book! Subhuman! revolutionizes our understanding of our relation to animals. It is alsoa deep and important contribution to moral psychology. Informationen zum Autor T.J. Kasperbauer is a Visiting Researcher in the Department of Philosophy at George Washington University. He has published widely on the relevance of moral psychology to animals and the environment, covering topics such as climate change, sustainability, animal de-extinction, and animal welfare. Klappentext How do we think about animals? How do we decide what they deserve and how we ought to treat them? Subhuman takes an interdisciplinary approach to these questions, drawing from research in philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, law, history, sociology, economics, and anthropology. Subhuman argues that our attitudes to nonhuman animals, both positive and negative, largely arise from our need to compare ourselves to them. Zusammenfassung When Harambe! a now-famous gorilla at the Cincinnati zoo! was shot for endangering a small child! animal rights activists protested! calling into question moral reasoning that privileges the possibility of injury to a human over definite violence to an animal. Many others! though less vehement in their objection! voiced the same questions: was the gorilla any worse than the negligent parents? Doesn't Harambe have rights just like you and me?How do we decide what animals deserve and how we ought to treat them? To what extent are our attitudes towards animals embedded in our subconscious and immune to reason? The foundations of our moral attitudes to animals are more complex than many may appreciate. Subhuman takes an interdisciplinary approach to these questions! drawing from research in philosophy! neuroscience! psychology! law! history! sociology! economics! and anthropology! to unearth surprising revelations about humanrelationships with animals. T.J. Kasperbauer argues provocatively that behind our positive and negative attitudes to animals is an enduring concern that animals pose a threat to our humanness. Namely! our need to ensure animals' inferiority to human beings affects both our kindness and cruelty to animals.Kasperbauer develops this idea by looking at research on the phenomenon of dehumanization! revealing that our attitudes to other humans are predicted and reflected in our treatment of other species. In making his case! Kasperbauer provides a critical survey of leading theories that range over the role of animals in human evolutionary history! the psychology of meat-eating and keeping pets! feelings of fear and disgust toward animals! the use of animal minds to determine their moral status! and the "expanding moral circle" hypothesis. By exploring the psychological obstacles humans face in meeting ethical demands! Kasperbauer sets forth new and fascinating ways of thinking about our moralobligations to animals! and how we might correct them. ...
Our relation to animals is among the most important and, at the same time, the most puzzling moral questions of our time: We love our pets and spend countless hours in zoos and aquariums while allowing the disappearance of too many species and the suffering to too many animals. By bringing cutting-edge psychology to systematically bear on this moral question, Kasperbauer's superb book, Subhuman, revolutionizes our understanding of our relation to animals. It is also a deep and important contribution to moral psychology.
Autorentext
T.J. Kasperbauer is a Visiting Researcher in the Department of Philosophy at George Washington University. He has published widely on the relevance of moral psychology to animals and the environment, covering topics such as climate change, sustainability, animal de-extinction, and animal welfare.
Klappentext
How do we think about animals? How do we decide what they deserve and how we ought to treat them? Subhuman takes an interdisciplinary approach to these questions, drawing from research in philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, law, history, sociology, economics, and anthropology. Subhuman argues that our attitudes to nonhuman animals, both positive and negative, largely arise from our need to compare ourselves to them.
Zusammenfassung
When Harambe, a now-famous gorilla at the Cincinnati zoo, was shot for endangering a small child, animal rights activists protested, calling into question moral reasoning that privileges the possibility of injury to a human over definite violence to an animal. Many others, though less vehement in their objection, voiced the same questions: was the gorilla any worse than the negligent parents? Doesn't Harambe have rights just like you and me? How do we decide what animals deserve and how we ought to treat them? To what extent are our attitudes towards animals embedded in our subconscious and immune to reason? The foundations of our moral attitudes to animals are more complex than many may appreciate. Subhuman takes an interdisciplinary approach to these questions, drawing from research in philosophy, neuroscience, psychology, law, history, sociology, economics, and anthropology, to unearth surprising revelations about human relationships with animals. T.J. Kasperbauer argues provocatively that behind our positive and negative attitudes to animals is an enduring concern that animals pose a threat to our humanness. Namely, our need to ensure animals' inferiority to human beings affects both our kindness and cruelty to animals. Kasperbauer develops this idea by looking at research on the phenomenon of dehumanization, revealing that our attitudes to other humans are predicted and reflected in our treatment of other species. In making his case, Kasperbauer provides a critical survey of leading theories that range over the role of animals in human evolutionary history, the psychology of meat-eating and keeping pets, feelings of fear and disgust toward animals, the use of animal minds to determine their moral status, and the "expanding moral circle" hypothesis. By exploring the psychological obstacles humans face in meeting ethical demands, Kasperbauer sets forth new and fascinating ways of thinking about our moral obligations to animals, and how we might correct them.
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