Animal Ethics: Cases and Theories
General data
Course ID: | WF-FI-POLLEAnEt-WM |
Erasmus code / ISCED: |
08.1
|
Course title: | Animal Ethics: Cases and Theories |
Name in Polish: | Animal Ethics: Cases and Theories |
Organizational unit: | Institute of Philosophy |
Course groups: | |
ECTS credit allocation (and other scores): |
(not available)
|
Language: | English |
Subject level: | elementary |
Learning outcome code/codes: | FI2_W09 FI2_W10 FI2_U03 FI2_U06 FI2_U13 |
Short description: |
(in Polish) The standard method of animal ethics consists in the production of a normative ethical theory deducing the morally required treatment of non human animals from a conception of moral animal moral status and giving prescriptions for the the right conduct in the various fields of relationships with animals. The course is aimed at presenting a different approach to animal ethics: the relevant ethical issues will be examined “from the inside” through a case by case analysis of the main contexts of human/animal interaction. The use for food, the research on animals and the conservation of wild species will be examined by means of a naturalistic methodology focused on the darwinian evolutionary theory. |
Full description: |
(in Polish) The course consist of the following issues: 1. Animal ethics: the standard approach 2. Animal ethics: a naturalized and sentimentalist approach 3. The ethics of (non) eating animals 4. Ethical issues in the use of animals in scientific research 5. The ethics of animal wildlife conservation |
Bibliography: |
(in Polish) D. De Grazia, Animal rights. A very short introduction, Oxford U.P., Oxford, 2002. M. Midgley, Animals and Why They Matter, University of Georgia Press, Athens, 1983 |
Efekty kształcenia i opis ECTS: |
(in Polish) Knowledge - the knowledge of relevant ethical issues emerging in the contexts of human/animal interaction Skills – openness towards some differing approaches to animal ethics combined with the recognition of naturalistic contribution in that field Competence - the ability to perceive and adequately interpret various approaches to animal ethics and to comprehend especially a naturalistic approach based on the Darwinian evolutionary theory |
Copyright by Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University in Warsaw.