The animalistic turn in philosophy and bioethics and the Kantian line in the protection of animal rights
Abstract
The article considers the influence of I. Kant’s ideas on the development of philosophical and bioethical discourse on animal rights. The doctrine of I. Kant, with its inherent anthropocentric attitude, is usually regarded as opposed to the spirit of the biocentric position that has been characteristic of Anglo-Saxon utilitarianism since the time of I. Bentham. The Kantian approach is supposed to ignore the issue of animal rights. In the article, the author argues that the teachings of I. Kant had a significant impact on the formation of the discourse on animal rights not only in the sense that animal rights activists perceived the ideas of I. Kant as arguments of their ideological opponent, which should be questioned, but also in the sense that they were accepted and developed in the 20th century as part of the biocentric discourse and were used to protect animal rights.
Publisher
Institute of Philosophy, Russian Academy of Sciences
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies