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  1. The Victorian Conflict between Science and Religion: A Professional Dimension.Frank Miller Turner - 1974 - Isis 69 (2):356-376.
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  • Animal minds and human morals. The origins of the Western debate.Richard Sorabji - 1993 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 186 (2):293-294.
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  • The Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed, to the Constitution and Course of Nature.Joseph Butler - 1736 - James, John and Paul Knapton.
    If the reader should meet here with anything which he had not before attended to, it will not be in the observations upon the constitution and course of nature, ...
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  • Animal Minds and Human Morals: The Origins of the Western Debate.Richard Sorabji - 1993 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    Sorabji surveys a vast range of Greek philosophical texts and considers how classical discussions of animals' capacities intersect with central questions, not only in ethics but in the definition of human rationality as well.
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  • Contested Moralities: Animals and Moral Value in the Dear/Symanski Debate.William S. Lynn - 1998 - Ethics, Place and Environment 1 (2):223-242.
    Geography is experiencing a ‘moral turn’ in its research interests and practices. There is also a flourishing interest in animal geographies that intersects this turn, and is concurrent with wider scholarly efforts to reincorporate animals and nature into our ethical and social theories. This article intervenes in a dispute between Michael Dear and Richard Symanski. The dispute is over the culling of wild horses in Australia, and I intervene to explore how geography deepens our moral understanding of the animal/human dialectic. (...)
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  • Animals and Their Moral Standing.Stephen R. L. Clark - 1997 - Routledge.
    Twenty years ago, people thought only cranks or sentimentalists could be seriously concerned about the treatment of non-human animals. However, since then philosophers, scientists and welfarists have raised public awareness of the issue; and they have begun to lay the foundations for an enormous change in human practice. This book is a record of the development of 'animal rights' through the eyes of one highly-respected and well-known thinker. This book brings together for the first time Stephen R.L. Clark's major essays (...)
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  • Animal Acts: Configuring the Human in Western History.Jennifer Ham & Matthew Senior - 2014 - Routledge.
    Animal Acts records the history of the fluctuating boundary between animals and humans as expressed in literary, philosophical and scientific texts, as well as visual arts and historical practices such as dissection, circus acts, the hunt and zoos. The essays document a persistent return of animality, a becoming animal that has always existed within and at the margins of Western Culture from the Middle Ages to the present.
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  • Victorian Science in Context.Bernard Lightman - 1999 - Journal of the History of Biology 32 (3):575-577.
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  • From beast-machine to man-machine.Leonora Cohen Rosenfield - 1940 - New York,: Octagon Books.
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  • The gender of modernity.Rita Felski - 1995 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    If our sense of the past is inevitably shaped by the explanatory logic of narrative, then the stories that we create in turn reveal the inescapable presence and ...
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  • The problem of pigs.Alice Dawson - 1999 - In James D. Proctor & David Marshall Smith (eds.), Geography and ethics: journeys in a moral terrain. New York: Routledge. pp. 193--205.
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  • Animal theology.Andrew Linzey & Brian Scarlett - 1995 - Sophia 34 (2):99-104.
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  • Human, all too human.Diana Fuss (ed.) - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    The question of what it means to be human has never before been more difficult and more contested. The human, with a complicated social history that his rarely been examined, remains entrenched in traditional Enlightenment thinking. Human, All Too Human considers how we might radicalize our notion of the human. Can the human be thought outside humanism? Any rethinking of the human places us immediately inside an ever-widening field of contrasting labels: animate and inanimate, natural and artificial, living and dead, (...)
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