In this chapter, I shall offer a comparative exegesis and critical assessment of the Christian and Muslim views of animals. This chapter is divided into three parts. First, I shall examine the similarities between the Christian and Muslim views on the place of animals in creation. Second, I shall look at the two greatest moral exemplars of the two traditions. Third, I shall address the issue of diet and the broader ethical implications of killing for food. My hope is to show that Christianity and Islam are much more sympathetic to the cause of animals than it is often presumed and that these traditions can provide valuable insights into our relations with our fellow creatures
Animals exist as a wide range of symbols and subjects in almost every significant area of religious ...
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—often called the Western, or Abrahamic (traced back to the biblical...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2019-09-30, revised 2019-11-29, accepted 2...
In this chapter, I shall offer a comparative exegesis and critical assessment of the Christian and M...
A common contemporary view is that the Bible and subsequent Christian thought authorize humans to ex...
The present article is based on the assumption that consideration of non-human animals is an importa...
This article argues that Christians have strong faith-based reasons to avoid consuming animal produc...
It is now common to blame Christianity for broader society’s general inattention to the needs and co...
In this article, I will argue that consideration of non-human animals is an important element of a g...
What does Christianity say about other animals? For many people, Jesus-followers and others alike, t...
Animal treatment has a comprehensive connotation and far-reaching implications in Islamic civilizati...
This book presents an authoritative and comprehensive survey of human practice in relation to other ...
Many people assume that serious reflection on animal ethics arose because of recent technological pr...
Islam is a comprehensive religion guiding the lives of its followers through sets of rules governing...
Animals are considered to be one of the large groups of the creation of Allah (SWT). According to th...
Animals exist as a wide range of symbols and subjects in almost every significant area of religious ...
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—often called the Western, or Abrahamic (traced back to the biblical...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2019-09-30, revised 2019-11-29, accepted 2...
In this chapter, I shall offer a comparative exegesis and critical assessment of the Christian and M...
A common contemporary view is that the Bible and subsequent Christian thought authorize humans to ex...
The present article is based on the assumption that consideration of non-human animals is an importa...
This article argues that Christians have strong faith-based reasons to avoid consuming animal produc...
It is now common to blame Christianity for broader society’s general inattention to the needs and co...
In this article, I will argue that consideration of non-human animals is an important element of a g...
What does Christianity say about other animals? For many people, Jesus-followers and others alike, t...
Animal treatment has a comprehensive connotation and far-reaching implications in Islamic civilizati...
This book presents an authoritative and comprehensive survey of human practice in relation to other ...
Many people assume that serious reflection on animal ethics arose because of recent technological pr...
Islam is a comprehensive religion guiding the lives of its followers through sets of rules governing...
Animals are considered to be one of the large groups of the creation of Allah (SWT). According to th...
Animals exist as a wide range of symbols and subjects in almost every significant area of religious ...
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—often called the Western, or Abrahamic (traced back to the biblical...
From PubMed via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2019-09-30, revised 2019-11-29, accepted 2...