
Contents
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1 Animals and the Natural Good 1 Animals and the Natural Good
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2 Human Attitudes Toward the Other Animals 2 Human Attitudes Toward the Other Animals
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3 Human and Nonhuman Good 3 Human and Nonhuman Good
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4 A Kantian Approach to our Relationships with the Other Animals 4 A Kantian Approach to our Relationships with the Other Animals
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5 Kant's Views on the Treatment of the Other Animals 5 Kant's Views on the Treatment of the Other Animals
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6 The Human Difference 6 The Human Difference
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7 The Reciprocity Argument 7 The Reciprocity Argument
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8 Assessing the Reciprocity Argument 8 Assessing the Reciprocity Argument
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9 Interacting with Animals 9 Interacting with Animals
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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Notes Notes
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34 What's Ethics Got to Do with it? The Roles of Government Regulation in Research-Animal Protection
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3 Interacting with Animals: A Kantian Account
Get accessChristine M. Korsgaard, Department of Philosophy, Harvard University
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Published:01 May 2012
Cite
Abstract
This article discusses a theory that has often been called deontological, but now is increasingly called Kantian because of its origins in the theory of Immanuel Kant. It starts with a characterization of two ways in which differences between human beings and nonhuman animals might be drawn in moral theory: thinking about what is good and thinking about right and obligation. Two general types of argument have therefore been used by philosophers in their attempts either to justify or criticize our uses of animal. This article argues that since animals cannot give consent, we should adopt the norm that we should “interact” with other animals in ways that are mutually beneficial and fair, and allow them to live something reasonably like their own sort of life. It is also implausible, this argument states, to hypothesize that an animal would consent to painful scientific experimentation.
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