Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Richard Hood Jack Dudley Ryder (born 3 July 1940) is an English writer, psychologist, and animal rights advocate. Ryder became known in the 1970s as a member of the Oxford Group, a group of intellectuals loosely centred on the University of Oxford who began to speak out against animal use, in particular factory farming and animal research. [1]

  2. This article is a critical review of Richard Ryder’s recent book, Speciesism, Painism and Happiness: A Morality for the Twenty-First Century. There are brief summaries of Ryder’s positions on the moral significance of happiness, the meaning of “specie-sism,” the moral theory he calls “painism,” and his criticisms of democracy and the

  3. Dr Richard D Ryder is a British psychologist and philosopher, who invented the concept of speciesism in Oxford in 1970 while co-initiating the modern animal rights movement.

  4. Dr Richard D Ryder is a British psychologist and philosopher, who invented the concept of speciesism in Oxford in 1970 while co-initiating the modern animal rights movement.

  5. Richard Ryder created the term speciesism in early 1970 and shared the idea with Peter Singer, who popularised it in his classic work _Animal Liberation_. A key figure in the modern animal rights revival Ryder appeared on the first-ever televised discussion of animal rights in December 1970.

    • Richard D. Ryder
  6. Richard Ryder (RSPCA) talks Painism, Speciesism, and the Law. Richard Ryder is one of the founding fathers of the animal rights mouvement. He invented the term 'speciesism' in Oxford in 1970.

    • 21 min
    • 1140
    • Akademie Tierschutzrecht
  7. People also ask

  8. Jan 15, 2020 · Clinical psychologist Richard D. Ryder performed animal experiments but quit the system and joined the animal advocates. Describing a moral standpoint that is akin to racism, he coined the term ‘speciesism.’

  1. People also search for