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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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Professionalizing Slaughter Professionalizing Slaughter
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Morality, Imagination, and Literature Morality, Imagination, and Literature
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Describing Animals Describing Animals
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The Mentality of Apes The Mentality of Apes
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Preserving Humanity Preserving Humanity
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Humans Perceiving Animals Humans Perceiving Animals
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Animals Perceiving Humans Animals Perceiving Humans
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Unconditional Love Unconditional Love
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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35 Literary Works and Animal Ethics
Get accessTzachi Zamir is a philosopher and a literary critic affiliated to the Department of English and the Department of General and Comparative Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His main publications include Double Vision: Moral Philosophy and Shakespearean Drama (2006) and Ethics and the Beast (2007).
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Published:01 May 2012
Cite
Abstract
This article notes that a number of Anglo-American moral philosophers have turned to literature for insights into moral reflection on animals. This “literary turn” in moral philosophy finds that some sensitivities or aspects of moral reflection are deepened by literary works. The main literary work focusing on animals that has attracted substantial interest from philosophers is J. M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello. Philosophers such as Stanley Cavell, Cora Diamond, Stephen Mulhall, and Peter Singer have all found it a repository of moral insight. This article suggests that moral philosophers are only beginning to mine rich literary descriptions of animals to gain moral insight and to explore the ways in which the invocation of animals awakens morally relevant dimensions in literary works.
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