Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- 1 Our Conventional Wisdom - Animals as Quasi- Persons -- 2 Two Contemporary Approaches to Animal Personhood -- 3 Animals as Persons-a Matter of Sentience Alone -- 4 The Right Not to Be Property -- 5 Veganism as a Moral Imperative -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Reference/Study Guide
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The animal welfare position, which represents the prevailing paradigm for thinking about our moral and legal obligations to nonhuman animals, maintains that animal life has a lesser value than human life and, therefore, it is morally acceptable to use animals as human resources as long as we treat them 'humanely' and do not inflict 'unnecessary' suffering on them. According to this position, animals are not self-aware and live in an eternal present; they do not have an interest in continuing to live as distinguished from an interest in not suffering. The use and killing of animals does not per se involve inflicting harm on them. The view that animal life has a lesser moral value cannot be justified in that all sentient beings are self-aware and have an interest in continuing to live. Although we do not treat all humans equally, we accord all humans the right not to be treated as property. We cannot justify not according this one right to all sentient nonhumans.
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Part I Sexism/Speciesism: Interlocking Oppressions -- I Sexist Words, Speciesist Roots -- 2 Exploring the Boundaries: Feminism, Animals, and Science -- 3 Carol J. Adams Woman-Battering and Harm to Animals -- 4 License to Kill: An Ecofeminist Critique of Hunters' Discourse -- 5 Speech, Pornography, and Hunting -- 6 Abortion and Animal Rights: Are They Comparable Issues? -- Part 2 Alternative Stories -- 7 Beyond Just-So Stories: Narrative, Animals, and Ethics -- 8 Thinking Like a Chicken: Farm Animals and the Feminine Connection -- 9 Of Wolves and Women -- 10 The Power of Otherness: Animals in Women's Fiction -- II Birds Don't Sing in Greek: Virginia Woolf and "The Plumage Bill" -- Appendix: "The Plumage Bill" -- 12 Taming Ourselves or Going Feral? Toward a Nonpatriarchal Metaethic of Animal Liberation -- 13 Speciesism, Racism, Nationalism ... or the Power of Scientific Subjectivity -- Bibliography of Feminist Approaches to Animal Issues -- Notes on Contributors -- Index
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