Is it true that living with an animal brings us health and happiness? What can we learn from biomedical research with mice? Which of the two enjoys a better life: the chicken we eat for dinner or the rooster that dies fighting in the quarrel? Why is it wrong to eat the dog that lives at home?
Based on his research for more than two decades in the new field of anthrozoology – the science that studies the relationships between people and animals – Hal Herzog offers surprising answers to these and other questions about the moral enigmas we face every day in relation to animals.
Herzog combines anthropology, behavioral economics, evolutionary psychology and philosophy, and with all these disciplines weaves an impeccable narrative enlivened with real-life anecdotes and scientific investigations and with his own sense of moral ambivalence.







