Course Reader REL 407/507 The Bull in the China Shop,
Winter 2010: Annotated
Interview
w/David Petersen: Ethics of killing animals for food. Attempts to go beneath
the surface of the food culture and questions vegetarianism as well as trophy
hunting. Makes case for hunter-gatherer respect for food animals.
Provides
overview of three of the most prominent ethical view of animals: Rights,
Utilitarianism, and Contractarianism, and raises questions of all three.
Outline
of the history of animal ethics in the West and adds comments regarding Virtue
Ethics & the Ethics of Care.
Religious
basis for one Jewish RabbiÕs vegetarianism.
Brief
account of a Muslim view of animal ethics citing the QurÕan.
Ecofeminist
critique of hunting for psychological, ecological, spiritual, and psychosexual
need. Offers alternative to hunting relationship to animals.
Overview
of Jaina and Buddhist view of animals in India, followed by discussion of
animal use in science.
Presents
a view of animals that is not speciesism (i.e., not based on human-centered
species bias) and instead claims the equality of all animals, human and nonhuman, based on sentience,
characterized by perception, feeling,
and in this article especially, the capacity to suffer.
Discusses
the consequences of large scale farming of animals, e.g., the agribusiness of
food animals.
The
three key early Confucians are: Confucius (Kongzi), Mencius (Mengzi), and
Xunzi. This article gives a snapshot of ConfuciusÕ ethics, especially ethical
development, or moral cultivation.
Explains
MenciusÕ method of extending virtue from immediate surroundings into society.
Focuses on the key passage for Confucian view of sacrificing oxen, Mencius 1A7. Essential reading.
Further
examination of animal sacrifice in Mencius, in particular ritual, li, and human virtue.
Xunzi is the third great Confucian after Confucius
himself and Mencius. Here, Ivanhoe describes XunziÕs contrast with Mencius on
human nature, and also XunziÕs view of the partnership of Heaven, Earth, and
Human Beings.
ZhuangziÕs
view of blending with the Dao beyond words with the example of Cook Ding
carving oxen.
Two
episodes not in Basic Writings: Zhuangzi
out hunting, and Zhuangi refusing to use a pulley to draw water.
There
are two key episodes in the Zhuangzi for
this course: Cook Ding the oxen carver, and this episode, hunting in Diaoling
Park (Tiao-ling), the focus of this article by Ivanhoe, and what he calls
ZhuanziÕs conversion experience.
Confucianism,
Daoism, and Buddhism on the ÒselfÓ concept and time w/great consequences for
nature & society.
Japanese
views of nature, especially Buddhist, and culminating with the Pure Land views
of Shinran.