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| 4266 | Having beliefs involves recognition, expectation and surprise |
| 4265 | If an animal has beliefs, that implies not only that it can make mistakes, but that it can learn from them |
| 4264 | Perception (which involves an assessment) is a higher state than sensation |
| 4271 | There is consciousness whenever behaviour must be explained in terms of mental activity |
| 4272 | Our concept of a person is derived from Roman law |
| 4267 | Conditioning may change behaviour without changing the mind |
| 4269 | An emotion is a motive which is also a feeling |
| 4270 | Do we use reason to distinguish people from animals, or use that difference to define reason? |
| 4284 | All moral life depends ultimately on piety, which is our recognition of our own dependence |
| 4273 | Kant's Moral Law is the rules rational beings would accept when trying to live by agreement |
| 4274 | The modern virtues are courage, prudence, wisdom, temperance, justice, charity and loyalty |
| 4286 | Only just people will drop their own self-interests when faced with an impartial verdict |
| 4283 | Sympathy can undermine the moral order just as much as crime does |
| 4290 | That which can only be done by a callous person, ought not to be done |
| 4285 | As soon as we drop self-interest and judge impartially, we find ourselves agreeing about conflicts |
| 4280 | Utilitarianism is wrong precisely because it can't distinguish animals from people |
| 4287 | Utilitarianism merely guides us (by means of sympathy) when the moral law is silent |
| 4281 | Utilitarianism says we can't blame Stalin yet, but such a theory is a sick joke |
| 4282 | Morality is not a sort of calculation, it is what sets the limits to when calculation is appropriate |
| 4295 | We favour our own animals over foreign ones because we see them as fellow citizens |
| 4296 | Brutal animal sports are banned because they harm the personality of the watcher |
| 4263 | Many of the stranger forms of life (e.g. worms) interest us only as a species, not as individuals |
| 4268 | Animals command our sympathy and moral concern initially because of their intentionality |
| 4276 | An animal has individuality if it is nameable, and advanced animals can respond to their name |
| 4279 | We can easily remove the risk of suffering from an animal's life, but we shouldn't do it |
| 4288 | Many breeds of animals have needs which our own ancestors planted in them |
| 4277 | I may avoid stepping on a spider or flower, but fellow-feeling makes me protect a rabbit |
| 4278 | Lucky animals are eaten by large predators, the less lucky starve, and worst is death by small predators |
| 4289 | Sheep and cattle live comfortable lives, and die an enviably easy death |
| 4291 | Letting your dog kill wild rats, and keeping rats for your dog to kill, are very different |
| 4292 | Concern for one animal may harm the species, if the individual is part of a bigger problem |
| 4293 | Introducing a natural means of controlling animal population may not be very compassionate |
| 4294 | Animals are outside the community of rights, but we still have duties towards them |