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  1. Aug 19, 2016 · Two recent studies have found many people agree that animals from dogs to snakes and insects experience life after death. ... Two new studies reveal what people think about the afterlives of ...

  2. Two new studies reveal what people think about the afterlives of animals.

  3. Sep 9, 2024 · Mainstream science also long dismissed the idea that animals possess interiority as humans do. René Descartes’s seventeenth-century writings, which argued that animals’ lack of language means that they don’t think or have any experience of the world, were extremely influential on the development of scientific thinking about animals.

  4. Jul 25, 2017 · Darwinism certainly made many people think about their kinship with animals, although the idea of a serial affinity between different species (the ‘ladder of creation’ or ‘great chain of being’), and even of species change itself, had been current long before the publication of The Origin of Species in . 5 For anatomists, the human–animal boundary had been blurred since at least a ...

    • A. W. H. Bates
    • 10.1057/978-1-137-55697-4_3
    • 2017
    • 2017/07/25
  5. of animal afterlives. As I will argue, these similarities are grounded in representations of animals in popular culture which support notions of animal sentience and animal souls. In this article, I will concentrate on the stories I have collected about animal afterlives and spiritual interiority: what people say happens to other-than-human animals

  6. Jul 11, 2024 · In these traditions, animals can be reincarnated into higher or lower forms of life based on their karma. Christianity and Islam, on the other hand, have more diverse views. Some Christian theologians argue that animals do not have immortal souls, while others believe that animals are part of God’s creation and may share in eternal life.

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  8. Dec 23, 1995 · There are many reasons for philosophical interest in nonhuman animal (hereafter “animal”) consciousness. First, if philosophy often begins with questions about the place of humans in nature, one way humans have attempted to locate themselves is by comparison and contrast with those things in nature most similar to themselves, i.e., other animals.

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