
Contents
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1. Respect for Nature 1. Respect for Nature
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2. Is Species Egalitarianism Hypocritical? 2. Is Species Egalitarianism Hypocritical?
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3. Is Species Egalitarianism Arbitrary? 3. Is Species Egalitarianism Arbitrary?
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4. Speciesism and Social Policy 4. Speciesism and Social Policy
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5. Equality and Transcendence 5. Equality and Transcendence
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6. Respect for Everything 6. Respect for Everything
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7. The History of the Debate 7. The History of the Debate
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Notes Notes
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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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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22 Are All Species Equal?
Get accessDavid Schmidtz is Kendrick Professor of Philosophy, Eller Chair of Service-Dominant Logic, and Department Head of Political Economy and Moral Science at the University of Arizona. He is also Editor-in-Chief of Social Philosophy & Policy. His book with Harry Brighouse on Markets in Education is forthcoming from Oxford University Press.
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Published:01 May 2012
Cite
Abstract
This article considers the defensibility of “species egalitarianism”—the position that all living things have equal moral standing and therefore all species command our respect. It challenges the view that there are good reasons to believe that all living things have moral standing in even a minimal sense. It explains why members of other species understandably and justifiably command our respect, but also why they cannot command equal respect. It also argues that there is reason to doubt that species egalitarianism is compatible with true respect for nature. The theory improperly suggests that the moral standing of dolphins is no higher than that of tuna, and that the standing of chimpanzees is no higher than that of mice. Such a view does not give dolphins and chimpanzees the respect they deserve.
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