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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Animal Liberation -The Modern Revival, Andrew N. Rowan
Animal Liberation -The Modern Revival, Andrew N. Rowan
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
People have questioned why there has been such an explosion of interest in animal welfare and animal rights during this period. One fortuitous event was the gathering of a small group of vegetarians at Oxford University at the end of the 1960s.
The Oxford Vegetarians- A Personal Account, Peter Singer
The Oxford Vegetarians- A Personal Account, Peter Singer
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
Peter Singer describes his encounters with a small group of vegetarians at Oxford University from 1969 to 1971 and some of the developments launched by those encounters with fellow philosophy students, including Richard Keshen, John Harris, and Roslind and Stanley Godlovitch. Others in Oxford at the time included philosopher Stephen Clark, theologian Andrew Linzey, and psychologist Richard Ryder. Members of the group have produced several landmark publications addressing the moral status of animals, including the initial volume, Animals, Men and Morals (edited by the Godlovitches and John Harris and published in 1971), Singer’s landmark volume, Animal Liberation in 1975, …
Animal Welfare, Rights And 'Liberation', Michael W. Fox
Animal Welfare, Rights And 'Liberation', Michael W. Fox
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
A distinction that is more than mere semantics needs to be made between specific philosophical and political trends in the humane movement. The movement's historical basis is founded upon the morality of promoting kindness toward all creatures: reverence for all life. This approach has been strengthened by integrating ecological or eco-ethical principles and the emerging interdisciplinary animal welfare science. Furthermore, the movement has been enriched by the scholarship of moral philosophy, including the limited but valuable concept of animal 'rights.'
A Reply To ''Animal Welfare, Rights And 'Liberation"' By M.W. Fox, Jim Mason
A Reply To ''Animal Welfare, Rights And 'Liberation"' By M.W. Fox, Jim Mason
International Journal for the Study of Animal Problems
A distinction that is more than mere semantics needs to be made between specific philosophical and political trends in the humane movement. The movement's historical basis is founded upon the morality of promoting kindness toward all creatures: reverence for all life. This approach has been strengthened by integrating ecological or eco-ethical principles and the emerging interdisciplinary animal welfare science. Furthermore, the movement has been enriched by the scholarship of moral philosophy, including the limited but valuable concept of animal 'rights.'