Rights, Interests, and Moral Equality

Environmental Ethics 2 (2):149-161 (1980)
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Abstract

I discuss Peter Singer’s claim that the interests of animals merit equal consideration with those of human beings. I show that there are morally relevant differences between humans and animals that Singer’s rather narrow utilitarian conception of morality fails to capture. Further, I argue that Singer’s formal conception of moral equality is so thin as to be virtually vacuous and that his attempts to give it moresubstance point to just the kind of differences between humans and animals that undermine his equalitarian thesis.

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Meredith Williams
Johns Hopkins University

Citations of this work

Taking humanism seriously: ``Obligatory'' anthropocentrism. [REVIEW]David Sztybel - 2000 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 13 (3-4):181-203.

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