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Kantianism for Animals: A Radical Kantian Animal Ethic
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Kantianism for Animals: A Radical Kantian Animal Ethic

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This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

Part I Kantian Foundations.

1 What Is Promising About a Radical Kantian Animal Ethic.

1.1 Kantianism for Animals.

1.2 A Constructive, Revisionist, Radical Agenda.

1.3 Limitations and Responses to Initial Worries.

1.4 The Way Ahead.

References.

2 Kantian Moral Concern, Love, and Respect.

2.1 What Is Moral Concern Kantian-Style?.

2.2 Kant’s Taxonomy of Duties.

2.3 Others’ Happiness as an Obligatory End.

2.4 Practical Love and Respect for Others.

2.5 Kant’s List of Duties Towards Others.

2.6 Kant’s Restorative Project in Moral Philosophy.

References.

3 The Case Against Kant’s ‘Indirect Duty’ Approach.

3.1 Kant’s ‘Indirect’ Account of Duties Regarding Animals.

3.2 Structural Problems of Kant’s Account.

3.3 Substantive Shortcomings of Kant’s Account.

3.4 The Unhelpfulness of Kant’s Account.

References.

Part II Building Kantianism for Animals.

4 Is the Formula of Humanity the Problem?.

4.1 Animals and the Formula of Humanity: Some Background.

4.2 The Esteem-Concern Equivocation.

4.3 Wood and Korsgaard Against the Esteem-Concern Equivocation.

4.4 Obligatory Ends: How Kant Derives Duties to Others.

4.5 What Is the Point of the Formula of Humanity, if Not Moral Concern?.

References.

5 Animals and the ‘Directionality’ of Duties.

5.1 Do We Truly ‘Share’ the Moral Law? Thompson’s Challenge to Kant.

5.2 First-Personal Versus Second-Personal Accounts of ‘Directionality’.

5.3 Rejecting Thompson’s Challenge.

5.4 Consent, Forgiveness, and Apologies Without Second-Personal Authority.

References.

6 Kantian Moral Patients Without Practical Reason?.

6.1 Duties of Respect Towards Moral Non-agents?.

6.2 Adopting Another’s Ends as Our Own.

6.3 Kant’s Denial of End-Directed Animal Agency.

6.4 Animal ‘Ends’: Conceptual, Non-conceptual, ‘Obscure’.

References.

7 Kantianism for Animals: The Framework in Five Claims.

7.1 Duties from Autonomy.

7.2 The Primacy of Duties over Rights and Claims.

7.3 Duties to Self and Others.

7.4 Practical Love and Non-exaltation.

7.5 Motives Matter.

References.

Part III Using the Framework.

8 A Kantian Argument Against Using Animals.

8.1 ‘External’ Arguments Against Using Animals.

8.2 A Kantian-for-Animals ‘Internal’ Argument Against Animal Use.

References.

9 A Kantian Argument Against Eating Animals.

9.1 The Philosophical Stalemate Regarding Vegetarianism.

9.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Argument Against Eating Animals.

References.

10 A Kantian Argument Against Environmental Destruction.

10.1 Kant and the Environment: Previous Approaches.

10.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Perspective on the Environment.

References.

11 Animal Ethics and the Philosophical Canon: A Proposal.

References.

Index.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Palgrave MacMillan
Date
16 August 2022
Pages
268
ISBN
9783031019326

This title is printed to order. This book may have been self-published. If so, we cannot guarantee the quality of the content. In the main most books will have gone through the editing process however some may not. We therefore suggest that you be aware of this before ordering this book. If in doubt check either the author or publisher’s details as we are unable to accept any returns unless they are faulty. Please contact us if you have any questions.

Part I Kantian Foundations.

1 What Is Promising About a Radical Kantian Animal Ethic.

1.1 Kantianism for Animals.

1.2 A Constructive, Revisionist, Radical Agenda.

1.3 Limitations and Responses to Initial Worries.

1.4 The Way Ahead.

References.

2 Kantian Moral Concern, Love, and Respect.

2.1 What Is Moral Concern Kantian-Style?.

2.2 Kant’s Taxonomy of Duties.

2.3 Others’ Happiness as an Obligatory End.

2.4 Practical Love and Respect for Others.

2.5 Kant’s List of Duties Towards Others.

2.6 Kant’s Restorative Project in Moral Philosophy.

References.

3 The Case Against Kant’s ‘Indirect Duty’ Approach.

3.1 Kant’s ‘Indirect’ Account of Duties Regarding Animals.

3.2 Structural Problems of Kant’s Account.

3.3 Substantive Shortcomings of Kant’s Account.

3.4 The Unhelpfulness of Kant’s Account.

References.

Part II Building Kantianism for Animals.

4 Is the Formula of Humanity the Problem?.

4.1 Animals and the Formula of Humanity: Some Background.

4.2 The Esteem-Concern Equivocation.

4.3 Wood and Korsgaard Against the Esteem-Concern Equivocation.

4.4 Obligatory Ends: How Kant Derives Duties to Others.

4.5 What Is the Point of the Formula of Humanity, if Not Moral Concern?.

References.

5 Animals and the ‘Directionality’ of Duties.

5.1 Do We Truly ‘Share’ the Moral Law? Thompson’s Challenge to Kant.

5.2 First-Personal Versus Second-Personal Accounts of ‘Directionality’.

5.3 Rejecting Thompson’s Challenge.

5.4 Consent, Forgiveness, and Apologies Without Second-Personal Authority.

References.

6 Kantian Moral Patients Without Practical Reason?.

6.1 Duties of Respect Towards Moral Non-agents?.

6.2 Adopting Another’s Ends as Our Own.

6.3 Kant’s Denial of End-Directed Animal Agency.

6.4 Animal ‘Ends’: Conceptual, Non-conceptual, ‘Obscure’.

References.

7 Kantianism for Animals: The Framework in Five Claims.

7.1 Duties from Autonomy.

7.2 The Primacy of Duties over Rights and Claims.

7.3 Duties to Self and Others.

7.4 Practical Love and Non-exaltation.

7.5 Motives Matter.

References.

Part III Using the Framework.

8 A Kantian Argument Against Using Animals.

8.1 ‘External’ Arguments Against Using Animals.

8.2 A Kantian-for-Animals ‘Internal’ Argument Against Animal Use.

References.

9 A Kantian Argument Against Eating Animals.

9.1 The Philosophical Stalemate Regarding Vegetarianism.

9.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Argument Against Eating Animals.

References.

10 A Kantian Argument Against Environmental Destruction.

10.1 Kant and the Environment: Previous Approaches.

10.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Perspective on the Environment.

References.

11 Animal Ethics and the Philosophical Canon: A Proposal.

References.

Index.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Palgrave MacMillan
Date
16 August 2022
Pages
268
ISBN
9783031019326