Alien Persons
Christine Nicol explores the meaty problem of eating aliens. What if they are like people?
Jake the Spaceman (aka comedian Jake Yapp) has crash-landed on a remote planet and doesn't have much food to keep him going until he is rescued. Fortunately, the planet is teeming with alien life forms that are edible, but which ones should he eat? He wants to cause the minimum amount of pain and distress to the creatures, so what does he need to know about the nature of the beings on the planet? Can they feel pain? If so, how can he minimise suffering? Will eating an alien cause distress to others? Is the alien so aware and sensitive to its environment that Jake needs to consider whether it is a non-human person?
Christine will interview animal welfare scientists, philosophers and wildlife biologists to get under the skin of animal sentience and the potential consequences of accepting that animals are conscious, aware creatures.
These big questions generate surprising and challenging insights into our attitudes to other life. When you know absolutely nothing about the alien in front of you, what do you need to know before eating it?
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Desiree Brucks
She has a background in Behavioral Biology and has worked with different animal species, ranging from mouse lemurs to dogs.
Professor Nickie Charles
She is also beginning to explore the effects of introducing PAT dogs into universities so that students are able to interact with them. Among her most recent books are聽听补苍诲听听补苍诲听, which she co-edited with Bob Carter.
She has set up an inter-disciplinary research network at the University of Warwick,聽.
Professor Nicola Clayton
She is also the first . She collaborates with Mark Baldwin, the Artistic Director, on new choreographic works inspired by science.
Professor Carolyn Muessig
Since 2002, she has been Co-Director of the Centre for Christianity and Culture. She is a member of the at the University of Bristol.
Professor Peter Singer
He is known especially for his work on the ethics of our treatment of animals, for his controversial critique of the sanctity of life ethics in bioethics, and for his writing on the obligations of the affluent to aid those living in extreme poverty.聽He first became well-known internationally after the publication of聽. In 2011, Time included Animal Liberation on its 鈥淎ll-TIME鈥 list of the 100 best non-fiction books published in English since the magazine began, in 1923.
Picture:聽Denise Applewhite - Princeton University
Professor Roger Scruton
He engages in contemporary political and cultural debates from the standpoint of a conservative thinker and is well known as a powerful polemicist. He is a fellow of the聽聽and a fellow of the聽.
Steven Wise
The Nonhuman Rights Project is working to achieve legal rights for members of species other than humans. Its聽mission is to change the legal status of appropriate nonhuman animals from mere 鈥渢hings,鈥 which lack the capacity to possess any legal right, to 鈥減ersons,鈥 who possess such fundamental rights as bodily integrity and bodily liberty.聽It filed its first cases in 2013 on behalf of captive chimpanzees.
Dr James Yeates
Broadcast
- Wed 30 Dec 2015 21:00麻豆社 Radio 4
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