If You Tame Me: Understanding Our Connection With Animals

Nearly everyone who cares about them believes that dogs and cats have a sense of self that renders them unique. Traditional science and philosophy declare such notions about our pets to be irrational and anthropomorphic. Animals, they say, have only the crudest form of thought and no sense of self at all. Leslie Irvine's If You Tame Me challenges these entrenched views by demonstrating that our experience of animals and their behavior tells a different story.
Dogs and cats have been significant elements in human history and valued members of our households for centuries. Why do we regard these companions as having distinct personalities and as being irreplaceable? Irvine looks closely at how people form "connections" with dogs and cats available in adoption shelters and reflects on her own relationships with animals. If You Tame Me makes a persuasive case for the existence of a sense of self in companion animals and calls upon us to reconsider our rights and obligations regarding the non-human creatures in our lives.
Narrowing the gulf between humans and animals
Related posts:
- How Dogs Think : Understanding the Canine Mind
- How Dogs Think: What the World Looks Like to Them and Why They Act the Way They Do (Paperback)
- Animals’ Apawthecary Senior Blend
- The Dog’s Mind: Understanding Your Dog’s Behavior
- Animals’ Apawthecary Herbal Ear Rinse

Tweet This
Share on Facebook
Digg This
Save to delicious
Stumble it
RSS Feed