Title variants
Languages of publication
Abstracts
This text is devoted to two most frequent and yet extremely different emotional attitudes of man toward other animals. These include: apparent interspecies approximation, consisting in cramming animals into patterns of specifically inter-human relations, and, a conviction that there occurs a total difference between 'them' and 'us', which triggers fear, if not aggression, in humans. Both of those positions and the resulting practice appear to be purely anthropocentric, in effect. However, along with changing consciousness and the language we use, such anthropocentrism is weakened and becomes, in many circles, a groundless attitude, if not arrogant and anachronistic indeed.
Keywords
Discipline
Journal
Year
Issue
Pages
222-234
Physical description
Document type
ARTICLE
Contributors
author
- M. Bakke, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza, Instytut Filozofii, ul. A. Szamarzewskiego 89c, 60-568 Poznan, Poland
References
Document Type
Publication order reference
Identifiers
CEJSH db identifier
07PLAAAA02615372
YADDA identifier
bwmeta1.element.ddd7d3a3-e490-3cdd-8afd-09707775fb61