Animal Rights Quotes

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Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know by Paul Waldau
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“The phrase “animal rights” has been, and still is, employed most often to describe moral rights and social values in favor of compassion and against cruelty. The modern twist is the emergence of conversations where the term means all of this and more, namely, the possibility of legal rights for some or all nonhuman animals.”
Paul Waldau, Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know®
“One often finds some form of animal protection at the level of formal government rule, but even more commonly one finds animal protection in daily life and informal social ethics.”
Paul Waldau, Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know®
“Science has recently detected certain kinds of cells in nonhuman brains that are thought to be the same cells that stimulate human emotions.”
Paul Waldau, Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know®
“A leading common sense–based reason for exploring other animals’ realities, which is also a scientific one, is the pursuit of truth. Science since the seventeenth century has developed a collection of subfields that reflect our considerable abilities to inquire in disciplined and creative ways about the universe we share with countless other organisms and inorganic objects and systems. A standard goal in all these sciences is “the truth,” which coincides perfectly with our natural curiosity. “Getting it right” about the realities around us also helps us have confidence in our ethical judgments about the world around us and its nonhuman creatures. Another common sense–based reason for trying to learn about other animals is that humans have long recognized similarities between humans and many other living beings. Traditional sources, such as the Bible, the Qur’an, sacred writings from India and China, and the stories of indigenous peoples, often reflect the commonality attested to in the third chapter of Ecclesiastes (this translation is from the Revised Standard Version): For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of beasts is the same; as one dies, so dies the other. They all have the same breath, and man has no advantage over the beasts; for all is vanity. All go to one place; all are from the dust, and all turn to dust again. Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward and the spirit of the beast goes down to the earth?”
Paul Waldau, Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know®
“As the English historian Marc Gold wrote in 1995, “The term animal rights is nothing more than a useful kind of shorthand for a movement based on the recognition that non-human animals live purposeful emotional lives and are as capable of suffering as humans. … kindness and tolerance for those different and weaker than ourselves are amongst the highest possible human aspirations.” But the connections by no means stop there. The phrase “animal rights” also connected people with “nature,” “the environment,” the local ecological world in and beyond their backyards, and, incredibly, with other humans in a variety of ways. Of great significance for the future, it seemed to me, was a pattern of children pushing their parents to consider “the animals.”
Paul Waldau, Animal Rights: What Everyone Needs to Know®