<p>Part I Kantian Foundations.- 1 What Is Promising About a Radical Kantian Animal Ethic.- 1.1 Kantianism for Animals.- 1.2 A Constructive, Revisionist, Radical Agenda.- 1.3 Limitations and Responses to Initial Worries.- 1.4 The Way Ahead.- References.- 2 Kantian Moral Concern, Love, and Respect.- 2.1 What Is Moral Concern Kantian-Style?.- 2.2 Kant’s Taxonomy of Duties.- 2.3 Others’ Happiness as an Obligatory End.- 2.4 Practical Love and Respect for Others.- 2.5 Kant’s List of Duties Towards Others.- 2.6 Kant’s Restorative Project in Moral Philosophy.- References.- 3 The Case Against Kant’s ‘Indirect Duty’ Approach.- 3.1 Kant’s ‘Indirect’ Account of Duties Regarding Animals.- 3.2 Structural Problems of Kant’s Account.- 3.3 Substantive Shortcomings of Kant’s Account.- 3.4 The Unhelpfulness of Kant’s Account.- References.- Part II Building Kantianism for Animals.- 4 Is the Formula of Humanity the Problem?.- 4.1 Animals and the Formula of Humanity: Some Background.- 4.2 The Esteem-ConcernEquivocation.- 4.3 Wood and Korsgaard Against the Esteem-Concern Equivocation.- 4.4 Obligatory Ends: How Kant Derives Duties to Others.- 4.5 What Is the Point of the Formula of Humanity, if Not Moral Concern?.- References.- 5 Animals and the ‘Directionality’ of Duties.- 5.1 Do We Truly ‘Share’ the Moral Law? Thompson’s Challenge to Kant.- 5.2 First-Personal Versus Second-Personal Accounts of ‘Directionality’.- 5.3 Rejecting Thompson’s Challenge.- 5.4 Consent, Forgiveness, and Apologies Without Second-Personal Authority.- References.- 6 Kantian Moral Patients Without Practical Reason?.- 6.1 Duties of Respect Towards Moral Non-agents?.- 6.2 Adopting Another’s Ends as Our Own.- 6.3 Kant’s Denial of End-Directed Animal Agency.- 6.4 Animal ‘Ends’: Conceptual, Non-conceptual, ‘Obscure’.- References.- 7 Kantianism for Animals: The Framework in Five Claims.- 7.1 Duties from Autonomy.- 7.2 The Primacy of Duties over Rights and Claims.- 7.3 Duties to Self and Others.- 7.4 Practical Love and Non-exaltation.- 7.5 Motives Matter.- References.- Part III Using the Framework.- 8 A Kantian Argument Against Using Animals.- 8.1 ‘External’ Arguments Against Using Animals.- 8.2 A Kantian-for-Animals ‘Internal’ Argument Against Animal Use.- References.- 9 A Kantian Argument Against Eating Animals.- 9.1 The Philosophical Stalemate Regarding Vegetarianism.- 9.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Argument Against Eating Animals.- References.- 10 A Kantian Argument Against Environmental Destruction.- 10.1 Kant and the Environment: Previous Approaches.- 10.2 A Kantian-for-Animals Perspective on the Environment.- References.- 11 Animal Ethics and the Philosophical Canon: A Proposal.- References.- Index.</p>