John Sanbonmatsu

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John Sanbonmatsu


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Average rating: 4.38 · 87 ratings · 23 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Omnivore’s Deception: W...

4.38 avg rating — 37 ratings2 editions
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The Postmodern Prince: Crit...

4.18 avg rating — 22 ratings — published 2003 — 6 editions
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Critical Theory and Animal ...

4.47 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 2011 — 5 editions
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La pensée végane: 50 regard...

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4.70 avg rating — 10 ratings2 editions
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Artwalks in New York: Delig...

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4.67 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 1991 — 13 editions
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Critical Animal Studies: Th...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating4 editions
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3 The Holocaust sublime: si...

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Quotes by John Sanbonmatsu  (?)
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“What would it mean for us to come to terms with the knowledge that civilization, our whole mode of development and culture, has been premised and built upon extermination—on a history experienced as "terror" without end" (to borrow a phrase from Adorno)? To dwell on such a thought would be to throw into almost unbearable relief the distance between our narratives of inherent human dignity and grace and moral superiority, on the one hand, and the most elemental facts of our actual social existence, on the other. We congratulate ourselves for our social progress—for democratic governance and state-protected civil and human rights (however notional or incompletely defended—yet continue to enslave and kill millions of sensitive creatures who in many biological, hence emotional and cognitive particulars resemble us. To truly meditate on such a contradiction is to comprehend our self-understanding to be not merely flawed, but comically delusional...

In the nineteenth century, the animal welfare advocate Edward Maitland warned that our destruction of other animals lead only to our own "debasement and degradation of character" as a species. "For the principles of Humanity cannot be renounced with impunity; but their renunciation, if persisted in, involves inevitably the forfeiture of humanity itself. And to cease through such forfeiture man is to become demon." What else indeed can we call a being but demon who routinely enslaves and kills thousands of millions of other gentle beings, imprisons them in laboratories, electrocutes or poisons or radiates or drowns them?”
John Sanbonmatsu, Critical Theory and Animal Liberation

“Every significant philosopher of the last 2500 years has claimed that only humans are free, only humans have an ontological capacity for freedom. That is a lie. The condition for the possibility of freedom is merely the condition for the possibility of unfreedom.”
John Sanbonmatsu

“The reason that we treat other animals as our slaves and as commodities isn't because they have this ontologically-rooted inferiority, it's that we see them as inferiors 'because' we find it useful to exploit them, and to harm them.”
John Sanbonmatsu



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