The Animal Inside
Essays at the Intersection of Philosophical Anthropology and Animal Studies
Herausgeber: Dierckxsens, Geoffrey; Begun, Michael; Bijlsma, Rudmer
The Animal Inside
Essays at the Intersection of Philosophical Anthropology and Animal Studies
Herausgeber: Dierckxsens, Geoffrey; Begun, Michael; Bijlsma, Rudmer
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A team of renowned philosophers and a new generation of thinkers come together to offer the first book-length examination of the relationship between philosophical anthropology and animal studies.
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A team of renowned philosophers and a new generation of thinkers come together to offer the first book-length examination of the relationship between philosophical anthropology and animal studies.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield International
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 392g
- ISBN-13: 9781783489015
- ISBN-10: 1783489014
- Artikelnr.: 50567249
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield International
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 392g
- ISBN-13: 9781783489015
- ISBN-10: 1783489014
- Artikelnr.: 50567249
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Edited by Geoffrey Dierckxsens; Rudmer Bijlsma; Michael Begun and Thomas Kiefer
Introduction / PART I: General Explorations of Human and Animal Nature / 1.
Nonhuman animals: a shared life and a licence to kill, Giulia Sissa
(Professor of Classics, UCLA) / 2. Kata Phusin: Ancient and Contemporary
Perspectives on the Hermeneutics of Animality, Thomas Kiefer (PhD-candidate
in Philosophy, Fordham University) / 3. Animal and Human Nature in Early
Modern Philosophy: Spinoza and Hume, Rudmer Bijlsma (Lecturer in
Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 4. Kafka's Animals in the Philosophy
of Jean-Paul Sartre, Jo Bogaerts (Lecturer in Literature, University of
Antwerp) / 5. What is Distinctively Human? Charles Taylor and Alasdair
MacIntyre on the Relation between Humans and Animals, Rob Compaijen and
Michiel Meijer (PhD-candidates in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 6.
Is it better to be a Human than a Lion?, Lantz Miller (Lecturer in
Philosophy, CUNY) / PART II: Aspects of Human and Animal Nature / 7.
Imagination - The Imagination of Animals, Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei
(Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University; St. John's College,
University of Oxford) / 8. The Political Animal - Werewolves: A
Reconsideration of Hobbes's State of Nature from the Perspective of
Biopolitics, Herbert De Vriese (Professor of Philosophy, University of
Antwerp) / 9. The Historical Animal - The Human Being as Historical Animal:
Dialectic and Polemics in Marx's "The German Ideology" and Nietzsche's "On
the Genealogy of Morality", Michael Begun and Lilian Cicerchia
(PhD-candidates inPhilosophy, Fordham University) / 10. Shame - Shame in
Front of the Cat? On Shame and the Other, Geoffrey Dierckxsens (Professor
of Philosophy and PhD-candidate in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 11.
Finitude - Being-toward-Meat: An Analytic of Human-Animal Finitude, Matthew
Calarco (Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University at
Fullerton) / 12. Joy - Animal Joy: Towards Cat Phenomenology, Babette
Babich (Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University) / Index
Nonhuman animals: a shared life and a licence to kill, Giulia Sissa
(Professor of Classics, UCLA) / 2. Kata Phusin: Ancient and Contemporary
Perspectives on the Hermeneutics of Animality, Thomas Kiefer (PhD-candidate
in Philosophy, Fordham University) / 3. Animal and Human Nature in Early
Modern Philosophy: Spinoza and Hume, Rudmer Bijlsma (Lecturer in
Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 4. Kafka's Animals in the Philosophy
of Jean-Paul Sartre, Jo Bogaerts (Lecturer in Literature, University of
Antwerp) / 5. What is Distinctively Human? Charles Taylor and Alasdair
MacIntyre on the Relation between Humans and Animals, Rob Compaijen and
Michiel Meijer (PhD-candidates in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 6.
Is it better to be a Human than a Lion?, Lantz Miller (Lecturer in
Philosophy, CUNY) / PART II: Aspects of Human and Animal Nature / 7.
Imagination - The Imagination of Animals, Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei
(Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University; St. John's College,
University of Oxford) / 8. The Political Animal - Werewolves: A
Reconsideration of Hobbes's State of Nature from the Perspective of
Biopolitics, Herbert De Vriese (Professor of Philosophy, University of
Antwerp) / 9. The Historical Animal - The Human Being as Historical Animal:
Dialectic and Polemics in Marx's "The German Ideology" and Nietzsche's "On
the Genealogy of Morality", Michael Begun and Lilian Cicerchia
(PhD-candidates inPhilosophy, Fordham University) / 10. Shame - Shame in
Front of the Cat? On Shame and the Other, Geoffrey Dierckxsens (Professor
of Philosophy and PhD-candidate in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 11.
Finitude - Being-toward-Meat: An Analytic of Human-Animal Finitude, Matthew
Calarco (Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University at
Fullerton) / 12. Joy - Animal Joy: Towards Cat Phenomenology, Babette
Babich (Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University) / Index
Introduction / PART I: General Explorations of Human and Animal Nature / 1.
Nonhuman animals: a shared life and a licence to kill, Giulia Sissa
(Professor of Classics, UCLA) / 2. Kata Phusin: Ancient and Contemporary
Perspectives on the Hermeneutics of Animality, Thomas Kiefer (PhD-candidate
in Philosophy, Fordham University) / 3. Animal and Human Nature in Early
Modern Philosophy: Spinoza and Hume, Rudmer Bijlsma (Lecturer in
Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 4. Kafka's Animals in the Philosophy
of Jean-Paul Sartre, Jo Bogaerts (Lecturer in Literature, University of
Antwerp) / 5. What is Distinctively Human? Charles Taylor and Alasdair
MacIntyre on the Relation between Humans and Animals, Rob Compaijen and
Michiel Meijer (PhD-candidates in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 6.
Is it better to be a Human than a Lion?, Lantz Miller (Lecturer in
Philosophy, CUNY) / PART II: Aspects of Human and Animal Nature / 7.
Imagination - The Imagination of Animals, Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei
(Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University; St. John's College,
University of Oxford) / 8. The Political Animal - Werewolves: A
Reconsideration of Hobbes's State of Nature from the Perspective of
Biopolitics, Herbert De Vriese (Professor of Philosophy, University of
Antwerp) / 9. The Historical Animal - The Human Being as Historical Animal:
Dialectic and Polemics in Marx's "The German Ideology" and Nietzsche's "On
the Genealogy of Morality", Michael Begun and Lilian Cicerchia
(PhD-candidates inPhilosophy, Fordham University) / 10. Shame - Shame in
Front of the Cat? On Shame and the Other, Geoffrey Dierckxsens (Professor
of Philosophy and PhD-candidate in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 11.
Finitude - Being-toward-Meat: An Analytic of Human-Animal Finitude, Matthew
Calarco (Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University at
Fullerton) / 12. Joy - Animal Joy: Towards Cat Phenomenology, Babette
Babich (Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University) / Index
Nonhuman animals: a shared life and a licence to kill, Giulia Sissa
(Professor of Classics, UCLA) / 2. Kata Phusin: Ancient and Contemporary
Perspectives on the Hermeneutics of Animality, Thomas Kiefer (PhD-candidate
in Philosophy, Fordham University) / 3. Animal and Human Nature in Early
Modern Philosophy: Spinoza and Hume, Rudmer Bijlsma (Lecturer in
Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 4. Kafka's Animals in the Philosophy
of Jean-Paul Sartre, Jo Bogaerts (Lecturer in Literature, University of
Antwerp) / 5. What is Distinctively Human? Charles Taylor and Alasdair
MacIntyre on the Relation between Humans and Animals, Rob Compaijen and
Michiel Meijer (PhD-candidates in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 6.
Is it better to be a Human than a Lion?, Lantz Miller (Lecturer in
Philosophy, CUNY) / PART II: Aspects of Human and Animal Nature / 7.
Imagination - The Imagination of Animals, Jennifer Gosetti-Ferencei
(Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University; St. John's College,
University of Oxford) / 8. The Political Animal - Werewolves: A
Reconsideration of Hobbes's State of Nature from the Perspective of
Biopolitics, Herbert De Vriese (Professor of Philosophy, University of
Antwerp) / 9. The Historical Animal - The Human Being as Historical Animal:
Dialectic and Polemics in Marx's "The German Ideology" and Nietzsche's "On
the Genealogy of Morality", Michael Begun and Lilian Cicerchia
(PhD-candidates inPhilosophy, Fordham University) / 10. Shame - Shame in
Front of the Cat? On Shame and the Other, Geoffrey Dierckxsens (Professor
of Philosophy and PhD-candidate in Philosophy, University of Antwerp) / 11.
Finitude - Being-toward-Meat: An Analytic of Human-Animal Finitude, Matthew
Calarco (Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University at
Fullerton) / 12. Joy - Animal Joy: Towards Cat Phenomenology, Babette
Babich (Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University) / Index