
 | Pictured: Dairy cows restrained in stalls. D.Hatz/Factoryfarm.org |
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Are animals just things? Or do they inherently deserve to be treated differently than inanimate objects? This question has occupied humankind, including philosophers, at various times throughout history. Concerns about the proper treatment of animals and animal welfare are relatively noncontroversial; it is generally understood that causing harm to animals is undesirable. The question of how to define harm, and where to draw the line, is another matter. Animal "rights" may be understood loosely—such as their right to be free of unnecessary harm and suffering—or more strictly, as actual legal rights established for the animals' protection.
The Idea of Rights for Animals Throughout History
The proper treatment of animals has been a topic of debate since at least the 6th century BC. Ideas informing the debate have ranged from the transmigration of souls between human and animal bodies, to a concept of hierarchy among all living things. Some of the concepts that attempt to define the proper relationship between animals and human beings include:
Animal Rights Philosophers and Thinkers
These individuals brought attention to the advocacy of animals through their philosophical teachings and public policy initiatives towards both humans and animals alike:
Ethical and Religious Practices with Respect to Animal Rights
An individual's stance on animal rights is often influenced by a wide variety of beliefs, including religious, ethical, ascetic, environmental, or nutritional reasons such as:
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 | Pictured: George Bernard Shaw.
Karsh/Woodfin Camp and Associates | |
Despite his failure as a novelist in the 1880s, George Bernard Shaw found himself during this decade. He became a vegetarian, a socialist, a spellbinding orator, a polemicist, and tentatively a playwright. He became the force behind the newly founded (1884) Fabian Society, a middle-class socialist group that aimed at the transformation of English society not through revolution but through “permeation” (in Sidney Webb's term) of the country's intellectual and political life. |
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Jain practices regarding the avoidance of injury to all creatures.
(Acquired from Vast Video)
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Learn about the many different types of vegetarians and the philosophy that most adopt.
(Acquired from Vast Video)
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Chicago Project on Animal Treatment Principles For several years, students and faculty at the University of Chicago Law School have participated in the Chicago Project on Animal Treatment Principles (CPAT), an interdisciplinary project that focuses on animal treatment in the food production industry and in medical and scientific experimentation. . . (read more)
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