Evolutional Ethics and Animal Psychology
OCLC 4854608 | |
Evolutional Ethics and Animal Psychology is an 1897 book by the American scholar and early
Summary
The book is divided into two parts: "Evolutional Ethics" and "Animal Psychology". The first part covers tribal society ethics, religious belief as a source of moral obligation, ethical relations of humans to other animals and
Reception
David Irons described the book as "an interesting, if rather popular and discursive, treatment of one of the applications of the theory of evolution."[1] A review in the Journal of Education described the book as "an interesting and important contribution to the fascinating discussion of the relation of animal species and human races to each other."[2]
Carl Evans Boyd was critical of the book's use of stories about animal intelligence which lacked "insufficient as a basis for generalization."[3] Boyd also criticized Evans for a "failure to recognize that if expatriation be a natural right, it is a right only as against the state of origin, and can have no reference to any other state."[3] Edmond Kelly criticized Evans' use of disputed Lamarckian theory in the book.[4]
In a revised edition of
Writing in 1989, R. J. Hoage described the book as, in the 90 years since its publication, remaining unequaled in its scholarship and insight on the topics of evolutionary ethics and the ethical treatment of animals.[6]
See also
References
- JSTOR 2176961.
- S2CID 220811603.
- ^ ISSN 1550-3283.
- JSTOR 2140182.
- ^ Salt, Henry Stephens (1922). Animals' Rights: Considered in Relation to Social Progress. London: G. Bell and Sons. pp. 12–13.
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: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ISBN 978-0-87474-493-4.