21. Spirits Dressed in Furs?, by Adriaan Kortlandt
Similarly, animal behaviour should not be seen as an outcrop of
inner experiences or driving forces inside the animal, but as the
fabric of meanings which are projected into the outer world by the
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/kortlandt01.htm - 40.8kb
22. Ambiguous Apes, by Raymond Corbey
uncivilised
behaviour. Animals and Animality are good vehicles for
symbolising, for thinking, for moralising, for disapproval: 'you
behaved like an Animal'; 'the prisoners were treated like
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/corbey01.htm - 38.7kb
23. Chimpanzees - Bridging the Gap, by Jane Goodall
once used to describe human behaviour
have crept into scientific accounts of nonhuman animal behaviour.
When, in the early 1960s, I brazenly used such words as
'childhood', 'adolescence', 'motivation',
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/goodall01.htm - 32.7kb
24. Against Zoos, by Dale Jamieson
argued that captive animals are more interesting research subjects
than are wild animals: since captive animals are free from
predation, they exhibit a wider range of physical and behavioural
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/jamieson01.htm - 34.7kb
25. The Third Chimpanzee, by Jared Diamond
unwilling to eat any animal
(yet willing to eat plants). An increasingly vocal minority,
belonging to the animal rights movement, objects to medical
experiments on animals - or at least on
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/diamond01.htm - 46.6kb
26. Fighting to Win, by Henry Spira
coalition of more than 400 animal rights and animal welfare
groups, which I initiated. The Coalition has been unusually
successful for an animal rights campaign, in that it compelled the
commercial
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/spira01.htm - 48.6kb