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E-grāmata: Capacity for Welfare across Species

(German philosopher specialising in ethics and political philosophy)
  • Formāts: 160 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192882349
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  • Cena: 71,00 €*
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  • Formāts: 160 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 24-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192882349

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Is my dog, with his joyful and carefree life, better off than I am? Do hens in battery cages have worse lives than cows at pasture? Will my money improve welfare more if I spend it on helping people or if I benefit chickens? How can we assess the harm of climate change for both humans and non-humans? If we want to systematically compare welfare across species, we first need to explore whether welfare subjects of different species have the same or rather a different capacity for welfare. According to what seems to be the dominant philosophical view, welfare subjects with higher cognitive capacities have a greater capacity for welfare and are generally much better off than those with lower cognitive capacities. Viak carefully explores and rejects this view. She argues instead that welfare subjects of different species have the same capacity for welfare despite different cognitive capacities. This book prepares the philosophical ground for comparisons of welfare across species. It will inform and inspire ethicists and animal welfare scientists alike, as well as a broader readership interested in wellbeing, animals, and ethics. Besides different views about capacity for welfare across species, the book discusses animal capacities, moral status, harm of death, whether bringing additional well-off individuals into existence is a good thing, and practical implications of these topics for counting and comparing the welfare of animals of different species.
1 Introduction
1(20)
1.1 Comparisons of Welfare across Species
2(2)
1.2 Assumptions
4(4)
1.3 The Difference-View
8(3)
1.4 The Equality-View
11(2)
1.5 Theories of Welfare
13(3)
1.6 What Ought We to Do?
16(3)
1.7 Outline of the Book
19(2)
2 The Difference-View
21(39)
2.1 Kagan's Objective List Account of Welfare
21(7)
2.2 Singer's Whole Life Preferentialism
28(3)
2.3 Mill on Higher and Lower Pleasures
31(5)
2.4 McMahan's Notion of `Fortune'
36(4)
2.5 Wong on Experiential versus Absolute Welfare
40(14)
2.6 Budolfson and Spear's Formula
54(6)
3 The Equality-View
60(28)
3.1 Animal Welfare Science
60(5)
3.2 Welfare as Self-Fulfilment
65(9)
3.3 An Evolutionary Perspective
74(14)
4 Welfare across Time
88(24)
4.1 Harm of Death
88(8)
4.2 The Relevance of Different Lifespans
96(3)
4.3 An Application of the Total-Duration View
99(13)
5 Practical Implications
112(31)
5.1 Moral Status
113(17)
5.2 Promoting Welfare by Creating Welfare Subjects?
130(7)
5.3 (Dis-)Counting Animals
137(6)
Bibliography 143(8)
Index 151
Tatjana Viak has a BA in psychology, an MA in political science, and a PhD in philosophy. She has been a lecturer and researcher in philosophy at various universities across the globe over the past 20 years. She is currently working in the field of psychology. She is the author of Killing Happy Animals - Explorations in Utilitarian Ethics (Palgrave MacMillan, 2013) and editor of The Ethics of Killing Animals (Oxford University Press, 2016). She has published more than 30 papers about welfare and animal ethics in scientific journals and books.