Abstract

IntroductionI. Mind 1. The Crisis: The Denial of Reason to Animals 2. Perceptual Content Expanded 3. Concepts and Perceptual Appearance without Reason or Belief 4. Memory, Preparation, and Emotion without Rational Belief 5. Forms, Universals, and Abstraction in Animals 6. The Shifting Concept of Reason 7. Speech, Skills, Inference, and Other Proofs of Reason 8. Plants and AnimalsII. Morals 9. Responsibility, Justice, and Reason 10. Oikeiosis and Bonding between Rational Beings 11. Did the Greeks Have the Idea of Human or Animal Rights? 12. Anarchy and Contracts between Rational Beings 13. Religious Sacrifice and Meat-eating 14. Augustine on Irrational Animals and the Christian Tradition 15. The One-dimensionality of Ethical TheoriesPrincipal Protagonists Bibliography General index Index Locorum

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