Animals and the Moral Community: Mental Life, Moral Status, and Kinship

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Columbia University Press, Sep 15, 2008 - Nature - 232 pages

Gary Steiner argues that ethologists and philosophers in the analytic and continental traditions have largely failed to advance an adequate explanation of animal behavior. Critically engaging the positions of Marc Hauser, Daniel Dennett, Donald Davidson, John Searle, Martin Heidegger, and Hans-Georg Gadamer, among others, Steiner shows how the Western philosophical tradition has forced animals into human experiential categories in order to make sense of their cognitive abilities and moral status and how desperately we need a new approach to animal rights.

Steiner rejects the traditional assumption that a lack of formal rationality confers an inferior moral status on animals vis-à-vis human beings. Instead, he offers an associationist view of animal cognition in which animals grasp and adapt to their environments without employing concepts or intentionality. Steiner challenges the standard assumption of liberal individualism according to which humans have no obligations of justice toward animals. Instead, he advocates a "cosmic holism" that attributes a moral status to animals equivalent to that of people. Arguing for a relationship of justice between humans and nature, Steiner emphasizes our kinship with animals and the fundamental moral obligations entailed by this kinship.

 

Contents

1 Arguments Against Rationality in Animals
1
2 Arguments for Rationality in Animals
29
3 An Associationist Model of Animal Cognition
57
4 Liberal Individualism and the Problem of Animal Rights
89
5 The Ideal of Cosmic Holism
117
Grounding Liberal Individualism in Cosmic Holism
143
Notes
165
Bibliography
191
Index
203
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About the author (2008)

Gary Steiner is John Howard Harris Professor of Philosophy at Bucknell University. He is the author of Animals and the Limits of Postmodernism and Anthropocentrism and Its Discontents: The Moral Status of Animals in the History of Western Philosophy.

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