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Animals, Mind, and Matter: The Inside Story
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Animals, Mind, and Matter: The Inside Story
Current price: $39.95
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Barnes and Noble
Animals, Mind, and Matter: The Inside Story
Current price: $39.95
Size: Paperback
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It’s no secret that animals are considered objects in the fields of law, commerce, and science, characterized as property and commodities.
Animals, Mind, and Matter: The Inside Story
challenges this ascription and establishes that animals are living subjects, who have minds and opinions of their own and care about what happens to them. Donovan contends that animals’ voices or standpoints should be part of any human decisions concerning their ethical treatment. Elaborating on feminist care theory and critical animal standpoint theory, the author provides compelling evidence for animal subjectivity, exploring in the process the nature of subjectivity and consciousness while drawing from recent developments in quantum and emergence theories that point away from the dominant ontology of Cartesian objectivism. Through these explorations, Donovan proposes that a new narrative is emerging in the arts and sciencesan inside story that re-subjectifies natural life and leaves behind the deadening Midas touch of Cartesian objectivism.
Animals, Mind, and Matter: The Inside Story
challenges this ascription and establishes that animals are living subjects, who have minds and opinions of their own and care about what happens to them. Donovan contends that animals’ voices or standpoints should be part of any human decisions concerning their ethical treatment. Elaborating on feminist care theory and critical animal standpoint theory, the author provides compelling evidence for animal subjectivity, exploring in the process the nature of subjectivity and consciousness while drawing from recent developments in quantum and emergence theories that point away from the dominant ontology of Cartesian objectivism. Through these explorations, Donovan proposes that a new narrative is emerging in the arts and sciencesan inside story that re-subjectifies natural life and leaves behind the deadening Midas touch of Cartesian objectivism.