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The Status of Animals in Biblical and Christian Thought: A Study in Colliding
Values
Rod Preece and David Fraser
A common contemporary view is that the Bible and subsequent Christian thought
authorize humans to exploit animals purely as means to human ends. This paper
argues that Biblical and Christian thought have given rise to a more complex
ethic of animal use informed by its pastoralist origins, Biblical pronouncements
that permit different interpretations, and competing ideas and doctrines that
arose during its development, and influenced by the rich and often contradictory
features of ancient Hebrew and Greco-Roman traditions. The result is not a
uniform ethic but a tradition of unresolved debate. Differing interpretations of
the Great Chain of Being and the conflict over animal experimentation
demonstrate the colliding values inherent in the complex history of Biblical and
Christian thought on animals.
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A Union of Christianity, Humanity, and Philanthropy: The Christian Tradition and
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Nineteenth-Century England
Chien-hui Li
This paper offers an historical perspective to the discussion of the
relationship between Christianity and nonhuman -human animal relationships by
examining the animal protection movement in English society as it first took
root in the nineteenth century. The paper argues that the Christian beliefs of
many in the movement, especially the evangelical outlook of their faith, in a
considerable way affected the character as well as the aims and scope of the
emergent British animal welfare movement— although the church authorities did
not take an active part in the discussion and betterment of the conditions of
animals. An explicitly Christian discourse, important in creating and sustaining
the important philanthropic tradition in Britain, mobilized the movement. The
paper also traces the gradual decrease of the centrality of the movement’s
Christian elements later in the century when evolutionary ideas as well as other
developments in society shed alternative light on the relationship between human
and nonhuman animals and brought about different trends in the movement. This
paper sees Christianity not as a static and defining source of influence but as
a rich tradition containing diverse elements that people drew upon and used to
create meanings for them. The paper implicitly suggests that both a religion’s
doctrines in theory and the outcome of a complex interaction with the changing
society in which the religion is practiced determine its potential to influence
animal-human relationships.
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Religion in the Making? Animality, Savagery, and Civilization in the Work of A.
N. Whitehead
Clare Palmer
Constructions of the animal and animality are often pivotal to religious
discourses. Such constructions create the possibility of identifying and valuing
what is “human" as opposed to the “animal” and also of distinguishing human
beliefs and behaviors that can be characterized (and often disparaged) as being
animal from those that are “truly human." Some discourses also employ the
concept of savagery as a bridge between the human and the animal, where the form
of humanity but not its ideal beliefs and practices can be displayed. This paper
explores the work of the influential scientist, philosopher, and theologian A.
N. Whitehead in this context. His ideas of what constitutes “the animal,” the
“primitive” and the “civilized” are laid out explicitly in his now little-used
history of religions text, Religion in the Making. This paper explores these
ideas in this history and then considers how the same ideas permeate his
currently more popular philosophical and theological writing Process and
Reality. Drawing on some work in post-colonial theory, the paper offers a
critique of this understanding of animality, savagery, and civilization and
suggests that using Whitehead to underpin modern theological work requires
considerable caution.
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Every Sparrow That Falls: Understanding Animal Rights Activism as Functional
Religion
Wesley V. Jamison, Caspar Wenk, and James V. Parker
This article reports original research conducted among animal rights activists
and elites in Switzerland and the United States, and the finding that activism
functioned in activists’ and elites’ lives like religious belief. The study used
reference sampling to select Swiss and American informants. Various articles and
activists have identified both latent and manifest quasi-religious components in
the contemporary movement. Hence, the research followed upon these data and
anecdotes and tested the role of activism in adherents’ lives. Using extensive
interviews, the research discovered that activists and elites conform to the
five necessary components of Yinger’s definition of functional religion: intense
and memorable conversion experiences, newfound communities of meaning, normative
creeds, elaborate and well-defined codes of behavior, and cult formation. The
article elaborates on that schema in the context of animal rights belief,
elucidates the deeply meaningful role of activism within a filigree of meaning,
and concludes that the movement is facing schismatic forces not dissimilar to
redemptive and religious movements.
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Addressing Animal Abuse: The Complementary Roles of Religion,
Secular Ethics and the Law
Pamela D. Frasch
This paper examines the role that religious belief plays in societies’ treatment
of nonhuman animals, first asking two questions. Does religious belief continue
to play a role today in societies’ treatment of nonhuman animals, and should it?
The paper discusses the interaction of (a) religion, (b) secular ethics, and (c)
the law. As with a three-legged stool, each leg or component relies on the next
for support. Religious values and claims, as features of the ethical framework
by which many people live, have daily implications for nonhuman animals. On a
sliding scale, negative to positive, a religious point of view may affect other
animals in different ways. Beliefs—religious in nature and origin—about other
animals sometimes stand behind the claims and ethical formulations of avowedly
nonreligious people and institutions and may be of some interest to philosophers
and historians. The paper concludes that only through consideration and
involvement of the three separate, yet inter-connected, components can animal
abuse be effectively addressed.
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