Article ID: CBB001202105

Animal Individuals: A Plea for a Nominalistic Turn in Animal Studies? (2013)

unapi

Hoquet, Thierry (Author)


History and Theory
Volume: 52, no. 4
Issue: 4
Pages: 68-90


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Special Issue: Does History Need Animals?
Language: English

This paper focuses on the concept of animal individuals and puts forward a nominalistic approach. Nominalism is an ontological thesis (only individuals exist), but also an epistemological claim: that our nouns are practical tools for a quick dispatch of things, but do not correspond to anything real. Hence for a consistent nominalist, animals do not exist, except as a powerful fiction. First, we show that the word animal commits what we call (after Plato) the fallacy of the crane: it encompasses a huge range of living entities that have only one thing in common: they are not humans. Differences between our term animal and the ancient Greek zoon also show the fluctuating boundaries of animality. Besides, our ways of speaking systematically deny individuality to nonhuman animals. The philosophical meaning of the term individual implies a genuine dimension of artistic singularity and a political claim for emancipation. Portraits of apes are striking instances of such individuality, captured by photography, as is art produced by particular animals. Methodologically, this leads also to the collection of anecdotes and a focus on animal biographies. The eighteenth-century controversy between Buffon and Condillac helps us understand what is at stake in the tension between species and individuals. Buffon claims that each nonhuman animal species can be represented by a specimen, whereas Condillac shows that animal individuals feel like us and that their nature is impenetrable to us. Finally, a focus on individuals is not only a way to renew or extend historical methods. Biologists are also increasingly concerned with individuals. They develop tools to distinguish individuals from one another: animal bertillonage for morphology. They question standard norms of behavior and preferences. This emphasis on animal individuality has not only theoretical but also ethical and legal consequences.

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Article Shaw, David Gary (2013) A Way with Animals. History and Theory (pp. 1-12). unapi

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Authors & Contributors
Liebman, Elizabeth Amy
Selisker, Scott
Tarabochia, Alvise Sforza
Antoine Traisnel
Laemmli, Whitney E.
Whitfield, Peter
Journals
Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies
Archives of Natural History
Spontaneous Generations
MHNH (Revista Internacional de Investigación sobre Magia y Astrología Antiguas)
Lychnos
History of Psychiatry
Publishers
University of Minnesota Press
National Library of Australia
Königshausen & Neumann
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Bodleian Library
University of Chicago
Concepts
Visual representation; visual communication
Science and art
Symbolism; symbolic representation
Animals
Natural history
Scientific illustration
People
Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc de
Condillac, Étienne Bonnot de
Burne-Jones, Edward
Smellie, William
Shaw, George
Shakespeare, William
Time Periods
18th century
19th century
20th century
Medieval
Enlightenment
Places
France
Barcelona (Spain)
Virginia (U.S.)
Scotland
New York City (New York, U.S.)
United States
Institutions
Dance Notation Bureau (DNB)
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