
Animals, Robots, Gods
Adventures in the Moral Imagination
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Narrated by:
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Mark Arnold
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By:
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Webb Keane
About this listen
This audiobook narrated by Mark Arnold offers a mind-expanding exploration of the ethical bonds we share with the nonhuman
Moral relationships saturate the living world, and the line between the human and nonhuman is blurrier than we might think. Animals, Robots, Gods provides a bold new vision of ethics defined less by the individual mind or society and more by our interactions with those around us, whether they are the pets we keep, the gods we believe in, or the machines we endow with life.
Drawing on pioneering fieldwork around the globe by some of today's leading researchers, acclaimed anthropologist Webb Keane invites us to expand our moral imagination. We learn about the ethical dilemmas of South Asian animal rights activists, Balinese cockfighters, cowboys, and Japanese robot fanciers. We meet a hunter in the Yukon who explains to a bear why it must come out of hibernation and generously give itself up to him, a cancer sufferer in Thailand who sees his tumor as a reincarnated ox, and a computer that persuades users to confess their anxieties as if they were patients on a psychiatrist's couch. Through these and other stories, Keane challenges us to rethink our most basic ideas about who—and what—we deem worthy of moral consideration.
Brimming with charm, wit, and insight, Animals, Robots, Gods reveals how centuries of conversations between us and nonhumans inform our conceptions of morality and will continue to guide us in the age of AI and beyond.
©2024 Webb Keane (P)2024 Penguin AudioCritic reviews
"Captivating. . . . Keane explores all kinds of fascinating material in his book, most of it taking place 'at the edge of the human.'"—Mark Epstein, New York Times
"In Animals, Robots, Gods, Keane embarks on a global journey across our messy moral terrains. Right from the outset, he prepares the reader to accept that identifying an always-applicable law might not be possible, as moral traditions are complex, contingent, and culturally specific. This imbues the discourse on the moral status of nonhumans with just the kind of crosscultural sensitivity that only anthropology can offer. . . . Animals, Robots, Gods lands as a narratively rich circumnavigation of how we treat others. . . . [A] fresh, accessible [entrant] to the burgeoning literature on the more-than-human world and our obligations toward it.""—Joshua C. Gellers, Science
"I found Keane's distillation of fieldwork into the ethics of hunting and animal sacrifice both gripping and provoking."—Simon Ings, New Scientist
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