L'auteur explore la frontière de plus en plus incertaine entre hommes et animaux, en convoquant aussi bien la philosophie que la littérature, la peinture et la science. Il s'agit, selon lui, de sortir de l'exclusivité humaine, d'admettre que l'homme n'est pas le sommet de la création.
Partiel de Nico de ce soir de mort là, j’en ai marre Mais bon y’avait de très belles phrases et la thèse est belle, mais franchement Jean Christophe tu utilises des mots trop compliqué qui ne sont même pas nécessaires je trouve alors tu m’a perdue à plein d’endroits…Mais c’était quand même un peu poétique
The author engages in a philosophical dissertation on the relationship between humans and animals. He highlights their commonalities, most notably vision and how to some extent animals see the world. He also discusses the role they play in human lives and how their absence would make our lives emptier.
The topic is interesting, but the verbiage is high browed and long-winded. The author often dances around the point that he wishes to make. At times, the chapters seem to be repetitive although the language and examples used are distinct from the previous ones. At other times, one wishes that the author would have spent more time and elaborated on the subject to make his point clearer. Suffice it to say that if the author had been more succinct and concise in his writing the book would have been far better. Therefore, it rates 3.5 stars.
Not quite the book I was expecting, in the sense that Bailly takes a more informal, poetic route that results in more of a meandering contemplation of the role of animals in our lives, rather than a focused and argumentative approach. If one has already read enough within the field, Bailly's text does not add much. I did love his discussion of contact in the beginning, how it is not about human becoming animal or vice versa but rather how the two exist close to each other, in a kind of tension.
A gorgeous book of philosophy that borders on poetry. I hope there will be lots more to come from the discipline of philosophy on animals and the animality of humans.