1. Dr Jenia Meng - ORIGINS OF ATTITUDES TOWARDS ANIMALS (2009)
animal's latent capacity for affection, heroism and self-sacrifice.
There is in Buddhism more sense of kinship with the animal world, a more intimate feeling of community
with all that lives, than is found in Western religious thought. . . . So
http://jmeng.goodeasy.info/publications/OriginsOfAttitudesTowardsAnimals_JMeng2009.htm - 949.2kb
2. Affection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
on the degree in which the affections are regarded as voluntary, see H. Sidgwick , Methods of Ethics pp. 345–349.
[edit ] affectionate behavior
Numerous behaviors are used by people to express affection. Some theories [ 3 ]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affection - 63.1kb
4. Earth April Research
JM动物福利指数和JM动物权利指数
English
动物福利和动物权利是不同的
https://earthapril.goodeasy.info/research/AnimalWelfareIndexAnimalRightsIndex/cn.php - 13.4kb
6. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Consensus Development Program: The H...
and love and
affection. Most children rate their own pets very high on both
characteristics while they rate neighborhood animals high on companionship
but not on love and affection. (By way of comparison, siblings tend
http://consensus.nih.gov/1987/1987HealthBenefitsPetsta003html.htm - 62.2kb
7. Comparison of the Mental Powers of Man and the Lower Animals, by Charles Darwin
of maternal
affection, related so often of the women of all nations, and of
the females of all animals, can doubt that the principle of action
is the same in the two cases?" We see maternal
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-c/darwin01.htm - 35.6kb
9. How to Do Animal Rights - Dogs: Communication & Control
you want to give him affection, command him to do something. Then when he obeys give him your affection as a reward. When he asks for something you want to grant him, such as to be let outside or go for a walk with you, tell him to sit or
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/dogs.html - 15.0kb
10. Animal Ethics: January 2007
like dogs, which return our affection regardless of our merits, or cats, which maintain an amiable pretense of affection while caring for no one at all (a fact always vehemently and fruitlessly denied by their keepers). The world of animals is a
http://animalethics.blogspot.com/2007_01_01_archive.html - 248.2kb