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GREAT APE PERSONHOOD


'Great Ape personhood' is a movement to create legal recognition of common chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans (the great apes) as ''bona fide'' persons.

Contents
Advocacy
Opposition
See also
Notes
External links

Advocacy


Well-known advocates are primatologist Jane Goodall, appointed a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations to fight the bushmeat trade and end ape extinction;Goodall, Jane in Cavalieri, Paola & Singer, Peter. (eds.) ''The Great Ape Project: Equality Beyond Humanity''. St Martin's Griffin, 1994. Richard Dawkins, Professor for the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University; Dawkins, Richard. "Gaps in the Mind" in Cavalieri, Paola & Singer, Peter. (eds.) ''The Great Ape Project: Equality Beyond Humanity''. St Martin's Griffin, 1994.Peter Singer, professor of philosophy at Princeton University; [1] Alan Dershowitz and Laurence Tribe of Harvard Law School; and attorney and former Harvard professor Steven Wise.[2]
Goodall's longitudinal studies revealed the social and family life of chimps to be very similar to that of human beings in most respects. She herself calls them individuals, and says they relate to her as an individual member of the clan. Laboratory studies of ape language ability began to reveal other human traits, as did genetics, and eventually three of the great apes were reclassified as hominids.
This, plus rising ape extinction and the animal-rights movement has put pressure on nations to recognize apes as having limited rights and being legal "persons". In response, the United Kingdom introduced a ban on research using Great Apes, although testing on other non-human primates continues. [3]

Opposition


Steve Jones, a geneticist at University College, London, opposes the movement, arguing that, although great apes share over 98% of DNA with humans, all species of life share common DNA to a certain extent. He also argues that, "Rights and responsibilities go together and I've yet to see a chimp imprisoned for stealing a banana because they don't have a moral sense of what's right and wrong. To give them rights is to give them something without asking for anything in return." [1]
Kenan Malik writes in ''Man, Beast and Zombie'' that demonstrations of apes appearing to use language have lacked rigour, and that there is no evidence that apes possess a natural capacity for language, abstract concepts, or symbolic thought; they do not, in Malik's view, possess anything like humans' awareness of self.[4]

See also



Ape

Ape extinction

Chantek

Declaration on Great Apes

Great Ape language

Great Ape Project

Hominoid

List of apes - notable individual apes

Person

Speciesism

The Mind of an Ape

Theory of mind

Peter Singer, Tom Regan, Steven Best, Richard D. Ryder

Great Ape research ban

Emotion in animals

Notes


1. Cavalieri, Paola & Singer, Peter. (eds.) ''The Great Ape Project: Equality Beyond Humanity''. St Martin's Griffin, 1994.
2. Motavalli, Jim. "Rights from Wrongs. A Movement to Grant Legal Protection to Animals is Gathering Force", ''E Magazine'', March/April 2003.
3. http://education.guardian.co.uk/businessofresearch/story/0,,1663535,00.html
4. Malik, Kenan. ''Man, Beast and Zombie''. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2000: 214-17.

External links



Great Apes Status of Personhood - G.R.A.S.P.

The Great Ape Project

Ban Ape Research

Ending Chimpanzee Research Project R&R: Release and Restitution for Chimpanzees in U.S. Labs

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