“Most people are raised with the belief that anymal exploitation is religiously sanctioned, and they will readily defend this point of view. Consequently, arguments in favor of anymal exploitation—including religious arguments—are easy to come by. On closer examination, most of these arguments do not defend anymal exploitation in general; they merely defend particular habits and practices, most oft en dietary habits and farming practices. People who identify with a given religious tradition oft en use sacred writings to defend personal habits, but such arguments tend to be both shallow and specific, contradicting core and foundational teachings. Those who pose such arguments, when questioned, often agree readily that their religion does not teach or tolerate cruel exploitation, particularly when such cruel exploitation is entirely unnecessary.”
Quote by Lisa Kemmerer
Work
Animals and World Religions
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Animals and World Religions
Source: Animals and World Religions
Source: Animals and World Religions
Source: Animals and World Religions
Source: Animals and World Religions
“Anything not worth doing is worth not doing well. Think about it.”
Source: Animals and World Religions
Source: Animals and World Religions
“Other people don’t have the challenges we have... but that doesn’t mean they don’t have their own.”
Source: Call It What You Want
“The most effective way to show compassion to another is to listen, rather than talk.”
Source: No Mud, No Lotus: The Art of Transforming Suffering