1. Animal Emotions | Psychology Today
Empathic chickens and cooperative elephants: Emotional intelligence expands its range again
chickens feel one another's pain and elephants know when they need help and cooperate with
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions - 76.5kb
2. Animal Emotions | Psychology Today
Empathic chickens and cooperative elephants: Emotional intelligence expands its range again
chickens feel one another's pain and elephants know when they need help and cooperate with
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions?quicktabs_5=1 - 76.6kb
3. Animal Emotions | Psychology Today
Empathic chickens and cooperative elephants: Emotional intelligence expands its range again
chickens feel one another's pain and elephants know when they need help and cooperate with
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions?quicktabs_5=0 - 76.6kb
4. Are nonhuman animals more moral than human animals? Yes they are | Psycholog...
about the foxes who invade chicken houses?†Well, I always like to say, “What about the innumerable foxes who haven’t?†You will sometimes see the “scapegoat animalâ€â€”an individual who others pick on
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201001/are-nonhuman-animals-more-moral-human-animals-yes-they-are?quicktabs_5=0 - 57.3kb
5. Are nonhuman animals more moral than human animals? Yes they are | Psycholog...
about the foxes who invade chicken houses?†Well, I always like to say, “What about the innumerable foxes who haven’t?†You will sometimes see the “scapegoat animalâ€â€”an individual who others pick on
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201001/are-nonhuman-animals-more-moral-human-animals-yes-they-are?quicktabs_5=1 - 57.3kb
6. Animals in media: Righting the wrongs | Psychology Today
game rather than cow, pig, chicken, fish, or elk. She also notes a strong tendency to refer to animals by their utilitarian end such as beef cattle, dairy cows, laboratory rats, or circus elephants
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201001/animals-in-media-righting-the-wrongs?quicktabs_5=1 - 58.6kb
7. Who we eat is moral question: Vegans have nothing to defend | Psychology Today
gas emission as a pound of chicken and 100 times more than a pound of carrots, according to Lantmannen, a Swedish group.†According to an essay in the New York Times (January 27, 2008) titled Rethinking the meat-guzzler “Global
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/200912/who-we-eat-is-moral-question-vegans-have-nothing-defend?quicktabs_5=0 - 60.2kb
8. Who we eat is moral question: Vegans have nothing to defend | Psychology Today
gas emission as a pound of chicken and 100 times more than a pound of carrots, according to Lantmannen, a Swedish group.†According to an essay in the New York Times (January 27, 2008) titled Rethinking the meat-guzzler “Global
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/200912/who-we-eat-is-moral-question-vegans-have-nothing-defend - 60.2kb
9. Who we eat is moral question: Vegans have nothing to defend | Psychology Today
gas emission as a pound of chicken and 100 times more than a pound of carrots, according to Lantmannen, a Swedish group.†According to an essay in the New York Times (January 27, 2008) titled Rethinking the meat-guzzler “Global
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/200912/who-we-eat-is-moral-question-vegans-have-nothing-defend?quicktabs_5=1 - 60.2kb
10. Animals in media: Righting the wrongs | Psychology Today
game rather than cow, pig, chicken, fish, or elk. She also notes a strong tendency to refer to animals by their utilitarian end such as beef cattle, dairy cows, laboratory rats, or circus elephants
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/201001/animals-in-media-righting-the-wrongs?quicktabs_5=0 - 58.6kb