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Ethics and Science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2009
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It has frequently been lamented that while the human species has made immense progress in science it is nevertheless ethically backward. This ethical backwardness is all the more dangerous because the advanced state of scientific knowledge has made available a technology with which we are able to destroy ourselves—indeed a technology which may have got so much out of hand that we may not even have the capacity to prevent it from destroying us.
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- Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1981
References
1 Singer, Peter, Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for Our Treatment of Animals (New York: Random House, 1975).Google Scholar
2 Even St Francis has a not too clear record on this question. One of his disciples cut a trotter off a living pig, to give to St Francis who was ill. St Francis told the disciple to apologize to the owner of the pig, not for his cruelty but for having damaged the property. See Passmore, John, ‘The Treatment of Animals’, Journal of the History of Ideas 36 (1975), 195–218, especially p. 200.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
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18 This paper was given as a Martineau Memorial Lecture, University of Tasmania, at Hobart and Launceston, April 1980.
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