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11 pages in length. Why it must be proven that animals possess rights – thereby wholly substantiating all animals as equal - is a notion that escapes those like Tom Regan who already know the answer to be true. What is actually being proven - or at least attempted - is that rights only exist on the human level by methods that are restrictive only to human consumption; that these methods address nothing on an animal level is indicative of their inherent misgivings. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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11 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAnimHvRt.rtf
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Regan who already know the answer to be true. What is actually being proven - or at least attempted - is that rights only exist on the human level
by methods that are restrictive only to human consumption; that these methods address nothing on an animal level is indicative of their inherent misgivings. II. SENTIENCE AND RIGHTS Of
all the voices who have cried out for a more compassionate and humane approach to the relationships between and among the animal kingdom, Tom Regans is heralded as one of
the loudest and most influential in the ongoing debate over human/animal equality. The fundamental basis of Regans (2004) stance in The Case for Animal Rights argues how the intrinsic
value of all sentient beings precludes mans arrogant behavior toward what he deems unworthy creatures, namely those beings that are anything other than human. The extent to which mankind
has uplifted his own species to such a position of superiority is both grand and far-reaching; that this self-imposed escalation has rendered tremendous ignorance and intolerance toward the rest of
the sentient beings speaks directly to the ill-conceived supremacy the human species believes it empowers. Animals provide a significant supply of goods for
human beings, not the least of which supports mans medicinal, food, companion and entertainment needs. However, in spite of all the various ways animals serve mankind, Regan (2004) notes
how there has historically been little thought given to their own right to existence, having always been considered little more than a disposable commodity. Whether it is the issue
of hunting, trapping, food farms, circuses, zoos or testing, the author points out that animals have long provided - and will likely continue to provide - humanity with some of
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