1. Animal Ethics: January 2008
opinion about the gray wolf.
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Keith Burgess-Jackson
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2. Animal Ethics: July 2008
a state of nature "man is a wolf to man" (Hobbes). A society founded on the principle of satisfying appetites is "a city of pigs" (Plato). The basic theriophobic stance is one of disgust at "brutish", "bestial", or "animalistic" traits that are
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3. Animal Ethics: February 2004
remarked, "but then the wolf is itself a cruel beast." The words sound so natural; it is quite difficult to ask oneself: do wolves in fact flay people alive? Or to take in the fact that the only animal that does this sort of thing is Homo
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4. Animal Ethics
a nice discussion with Clark Wolf this afternoon. It ranged over music, politics, and philosophy, but the most interesting subject was how each of us came to discover and fall in love with philosophy. As I explained to Clark, I came at
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5. Animal Ethics: September 2009
York Times blog post about wolf hunting. This passage puzzles me: Unsurprisingly, I believe it is wrong to inflict pain and death unnecessarily on a creature capable of suffering. (Peter Singer more broadly examines the moral standing of animals
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6. Animal Ethics: February 2009
far-fetched sophistry. The wolf devours the lamb, and is no worse a wolf for it; but if he seek, as in the fable, to give quibbling excuses for his wolfishness, he becomes a byword for hypocrisy.(Henry S. Salt , The Logic of Vegetarianism:
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2009_02_01_archive.html - 135.7kb
7. Animal Ethics
remarked, "but then the wolf is itself a cruel beast." The words sound so natural; it is quite difficult to ask oneself: do wolves in fact flay people alive? Or to take in the fact that the only animal that does this sort of thing is Homo
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2004-03-01T18%3A34%3A00-06%3A00 - 184.1kb
8. Animal Ethics: April 2009
and the Fate of the Gray Wolf ” (Editorial Observer, April 13): Verlyn Klinkenborg is correct that it’s not just the behavior and biology of wolves that will determine whether they survive. It’s also our own attitudes and
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9. Animal Ethics: October 2007
a nice discussion with Clark Wolf this afternoon. It ranged over music, politics, and philosophy, but the most interesting subject was how each of us came to discover and fall in love with philosophy. As I explained to Clark, I came at
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2007_10_01_archive.html - 152.2kb
10. Animal Ethics: June 2004
of another. Is a wolf immoral for eating a lamb? It seems to me that if I have to consider the morality of consuming a wolf, then the element of sentience that a wolf may possess that would make eating him immoral also places the wolf
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