Corporeality, prolepsis and dignity. A non-speciesist study of human dignity and animal worth

Corporeidad, prolepsis y dignidad. Un estudio no especista de la dignidad humana y el valor animal

Corporeidade, prolepse e dignidade. Um estudo não especista da dignidade humana e valor animal

Tejedor, José María
Detalles Bibliográficos
2023
Curepo humano
Cuerpo animal
Persona humana
Especismo
Prolepsis
Dignidad
Mundo animal
Human body
Animal body
Human person
Speciesism
Prolepsis
Dignity
Animal world
Corpo humano
Corpo animal
Pessoa humana
Especismo
Prolepsia
Dignidade
Mundo animal
Español
Universidad de Montevideo
REDUM
http://revistas.um.edu.uy/index.php/revistahumanidades/article/view/1176
Acceso abierto
Atribución 4.0 Internacional
Resumen:
Sumario:The distinction between the human body and the animal body is one of the interpretative key aspects of what distinguishes the human being from the rest of the living beings. In the early 1970s, the accusation of speciesism arose against those who proposed differential treatment of human beings, above other animal species. Speciesism would be a form of discrimination akin to racism or sexism, and therefore unfair. For some time now, the social influence of this current of thought has been continuously increasing, even changing the relationship with the animal world. However, this position violates human dignity in one way or another, at least in cases such as with the most vulnerable. This is why we will try to argue why the arguments of speciesism do not hold. The human person possesses a particular dignity, not for reasons of species, but because being treated in advance as a person, we respond with characteristics that demonstrate the ability to possess that moral status. This argument, taken from Timothy Chappell, is based on the proleptic treatment of the person. Based on this idea, we will attempt to respond to the specific arguments of anti-speciesism and demonstrate why the human person deserves a different moral treatment than other living beings.