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Animal Rights "The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them. That's the essence of inhumanity" George Bernard Shaw

Animal  Rights

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Animal  Rights. "The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them. That's the essence of inhumanity" George Bernard Shaw. What does "Animal Rights" mean?. –plural noun - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Animal  Rights

  Animal  Rights "The worst sin towards our fellow creatures is not to hate them, but to

be indifferent to them. That's the essence of inhumanity" George Bernard Shaw

Page 2: Animal  Rights

What does "Animal Rights" mean?

–plural noun the rights of animals, claimed on ethical grounds, to the same humane treatment

and protection from exploitation and abuse that are accorded to humans.

“It is not the animals who are demanding rights, but the humans who are conferring rights upon

the animals. This argument is not about the rights of animals but about the duties of human

beings.”http://susanrosenthal.com/articles/animal-rights-or-human-responsibilities

HOWEVER

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Then God said: "Let us make humankind in our own image, according to our likeness;

and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over

the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps upon the

earth."                                                 Genesis 1:26-27

Discussion point:         What does dominion mean??                     What responsibilities does it imply, if any?

History - Where did it all begin??

Ownership?

Stewardship?

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History17th Century - Animals as automata

FIRST KNOWN LAWS PROTECTING ANIMALS The first known legislation against animal cruelty in the

English-speaking world was passed in Ireland in 1635. It prohibited pulling wool off sheep, and the attaching of ploughs to horses' tails, referring to "the cruelty used to beasts”.

In 1641 the first legal code to protect domestic animals in North America was passed by the Massachusetts Bay Colony - No man shall exercise any Tyranny or Cruelty toward any Creature which are usually kept for man's use.

18th Century - Centrality of sentience, not reason

Frenchman Francois Magendie (1783-1855) was among the first to determine that many bodily processes resulted from the co-functioning of several organs. This realisation set in train numerous experiments that involved manipulative procedures rather than just internal observations.

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History In 1824 the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals (SPCA) was

established in England. Its members committed themselves to the principles of kindness to animals. Later in 1840, Queen Victoria gave the society her personal endorsement by giving it the title Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals. Throughout the nineteenth century, the RSPCA successfully lobbied for numerous changes to legislation.

19th Century - Emergence of jus animalium

The establishment of the SPCA/RSPCA started the regulation of treatment of animals in farming and domestication and some might say, the development of collective societal beliefs and values with regard to the treatment of animals.

However, the medical and scientific community were also coming under scrutiny. No longer were people free to experiment with animals, the Cruelty to Animals Act (1876) required that any person wishing to perform experiments using live vertebrates must first be licensed, and all experiments involving animals be certified by the British Home Secretary.

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20th Century - Increase in animal use and start of animal rights movement.Perhaps the most influential work to be published at that time, or

since, was Australian philosopher Peter Singer's Animal Liberation (1975)

Bernard Rollin's Animal Rights and Human Morality (1981) were crucial publications in the resurgence of popular interest in the controversy that is animal welfare.

21st Century - First rights proposed for animals1. Animal welfare laws may be defined as those laws that seek to promote the

interests of animals, within a legal framework that characterises them as property.

2. Animal rights law may be defined as an area of law which seeks to question animals' well-entrenched status as property, with a view to securing fundamental rights for animals.

3. Animals, Welfare and Bills of Rights: At the present time, there are no universally accepted animal welfare laws or ‘Bills of Rights’ that set out the legal interests and entitlements of animals.

History

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 Discussion point:     Are human and animal lives of equal value?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3Y3qcdWkto&feature=player_embedded&has_verified=1

The Value of Life

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Respect for the welfare of animals is a precept of some ancient Eastern religions, including Jainism, which enjoins ahimsa  (“noninjury”) toward all living things, and Buddhism, which forbids the needless killing of animals, especially (in India) of cows.

Traditional Judaism and Christianity taught that animals were created by God for human use, including as food, and many Christian thinkers argued that humans had no moral duties of any kind to animals.

Major World Religion Perspectives on Animal Rights

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The Qur’an has a tendency towards anthropocentrism. The Qur'an explicitly allows the eating of the meat of animals.

Buddhism considers all of life to be evolving toward higher consciousness. To the Buddhist, any practice by which man sustains himself at the expense of other sentient beings is considered wrong.

Because Hinduism is a term that includes many different although related religious ideas, there is no clear single Hindu view on the right way to treat animals.

Major World Religion Perspectives on Animal Rights

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 Do animal rights vary for different types of

animals?  

Can or should all animals have equal rights?

Something to ponder as you read the next few slides.

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How are animals viewed in Industry?Fashion

Medical / Scientific ResearchThe use of animals for medical research has led to the development of numerous vacinations and cures for deseases which have killed millions of people. But at what cost?  How should vaccines be tested and developed? If animal testing didn't take place then people would still be dying from these diseases today.

For thousands of years people have killed animals for their fur. 

Discoveries in technology have led to the development  of synthetic fibres, increased production in other natural fibres which do not require the killing of animals. 

How does this change our understanding of animal rights?

Do we still need to kill animals for their fur? Should we?

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 Australians love food. In the last 30 years, our society has experienced a food revolution, which has transformed the lives of more than half a billion Australian farm animals who comprise the meat, milk and egg producing machines annually called on to satisfy our national appetite. The interests of farm animals have been largely disregarded in this relentless pursuit for profit. Most animals in factory farms live a life of confinement.

Farming of animals 

 

How are animals viewed in Industry?

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Loss and Destruction of Natural Habitats

Does animal rights include the protection of animal habitats? Many natural habitats for animals are being lost through deforestation. Deforestation is the

clearing of forests by logging and/or burning and occurs in many countries around the world for many reasons.

Forests are cleared for many different reasons including, trees or derived charcoal being used as or sold for fuel, pasture for livestock, growing crops and expansion of communities who require more housing. This provides an income for many families.

The removal of trees and destruction of these habitats has resulted in much devastation including biodiversity loss, aridity and the extinction of many species of animals.

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Consumer Choices

Do individuals have a role to play in defining / shaping the treatment of animals?

As consumers we are now becoming informed with regard to how animals are treated before being sold to us as consumer

products.

What obligation if any do we have to buy products which support the ethical and humane treatment of animals?

Consumer buying power can make a difference. 20 years

ago consumers bought eggs without much consideration for where they came from.

Today we expect to be informed with regard to where our eggs come from so that we can choose between free range and cage eggs.

Should financial cost play a role in our decision making?

We have the choice to buy tuna which is harvested without needlessly killing dolphins.

Consumer demands for these products is on the rise. Is it elitism or genuine concern for animal rights?

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Domestication is a process whereby man has structurally, physiologically and behaviourally modified certain species of animals by maintaining them in or near human habitation and by breeding from those certain animals who seem best suited for various human objectives.

Domestic Pets

Do individuals have a role to play in defining / shaping the treatment of animals?

As life becomes busier what does this mean for our pets?

What obligation do we have to them?

Home alone for over 12 hours a day?

OR

Is this taking animal rights too

far?Do we have the right to domesticate animals?

Can we reverse the process of domestication?

Is it humane to tame wild animals?

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Over the past 60,000 years we have successfully managed our natural environment to provide for our cultural and physical needs. We have a holistic approach to life - the environment and our culture are one and the same. We have a lifetime commitment to protect and sustainably use our natural resources.

"An indigenous perspective on flying fox harvesting" by Charles L Massi.

Harvesting and eating wildlife is a vital part of indigenous cultures however animals are not kept in cages and are treated with respect. Indigenous peoples kill what they need

and use all parts of the animal.

What can we learn from the way in which indigenous people interact with animals?

Indigenous people of Australia and the treatment of animals

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Goldfinger Lyrics Artist: GoldfingerSong: Free MeAlbum: Open Your Eyes

I didn’t ask you to take me from here, I didn’t ask to be brokenI didn’t ask you to stroke my hair, or treat me like a worthless token But my skin is thick and my mind is strongI am built like my father was, I’ve done nothing wrong

So free me, I just wanna feel what life should beI just want enough space to turn around and face the truth, so free me When are you gonna realize you’re just wrongYou can’t even think for yourself, can’t even make up your minds So my minds a jail, I hate the whole god damn human raceWhat the hell do you want from me? Kill me if you just don’t know Or free me, I just want to feel what life should beI just want enough space to turn around cause you’re all fucked and someday maybe you’ll treat me like you

WARNING This is a very graphic video clip and could upset many viewershttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rRWLTGSNvg&feature=related

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Green Peace: Probably the best known organisation around the globe for defending therights of animalsthat started in 1971

WWF-World Wide Fund For Nature: Protecting the wildlife around the globe and saving animals from extinction

RSPCA - Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals:Organisation that safeguards the way in which people treat animals in captivity.

PETA - People for theEthical Treatment of Animals: American organisation that supports the universal declaration of animalrights (1972)

Conservationist/ActivistMany groups of conservationists and activists have taken up the cause

of defending the animal rights. Some of the best known include:

Why is this such an emotionally charged issue with many activists being seen as trouble makers? Why do we have so many of these types of organisations throughout the world?

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Animal rights?

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BIBLIOGRAPHY and

FURTHER READING

Animals Australia, the Voice for Animalshttp://www.animalsaustralia.org/factsheets/animal_exploitation.php

allcreatures.org - Working for a Peaceful World for Humans, Animals and the Environmenthttp://www.all-creatures.org/anex/index.html

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animalshttp://www.peta.org/

Greenpeace -Asia Pacifichttp://www.greenpeace.org/australia/

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WWF – World Wide Fund for Naturehttp://wwf.org.au/

RSPCA – Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animalshttp://www.rspca.org.au/