
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Humans have long used our ability to experience complex emotions to distinguish ourselves from other animals. But is this ability really isolated to our species? And if non-human animals do have the capacity to emote, what does that say about how we treat them? By Emily Moran Barwick at BiteSizeVegan.org.
Original post: https://bitesizevegan.org/animalsgrieve.
Bite Size Vegan was founded on the belief that everyone deserves access to solid, factual information on issues impacting their health, our planet, society, and the lives of other sentient beings. The website, videos, resources and speeches serve to provide this access in formats tailored to modern methods of information consumption—digestible and approachable, yet backed by rigorous research.
Believing in the power of an informed public, Emily provides free, open-access to right-to-know information in a digestible format. Bite Size Vegan fills a unique space in vegan activism & advocacy by bringing together the accessibility of engaging social-media content with the integrity and depth of research-backed, transparently-cited educational information. By helping people make the connection that veganism—far from an extreme way of life—is simply aligning our actions with the values we already have, Bite Size Vegan strives to end the pervasive exploitation of non-human animals.
How to support the podcast:
Follow Plant Based Briefing on social media:
Twitter: @PlantBasedBrief
YouTube: YouTube.com/PlantBasedBriefing
Facebook: Facebook.com/PlantBasedBriefing
LinkedIn: Plant Based Briefing Podcast
Instagram: @PlantBasedBriefing
#vegan #plantbased #veganpodcast #plantbasedpodcast #plantbasedbriefing #bitesizevegan #speciesism #animalrights #grief #animalemotions #animalsentience #sentient #emotions #elephants #gorillas #chimpanzees #Dolphins #cows #horses #chickens #animalgrief
By Marian Erikson4.7
5959 ratings
Humans have long used our ability to experience complex emotions to distinguish ourselves from other animals. But is this ability really isolated to our species? And if non-human animals do have the capacity to emote, what does that say about how we treat them? By Emily Moran Barwick at BiteSizeVegan.org.
Original post: https://bitesizevegan.org/animalsgrieve.
Bite Size Vegan was founded on the belief that everyone deserves access to solid, factual information on issues impacting their health, our planet, society, and the lives of other sentient beings. The website, videos, resources and speeches serve to provide this access in formats tailored to modern methods of information consumption—digestible and approachable, yet backed by rigorous research.
Believing in the power of an informed public, Emily provides free, open-access to right-to-know information in a digestible format. Bite Size Vegan fills a unique space in vegan activism & advocacy by bringing together the accessibility of engaging social-media content with the integrity and depth of research-backed, transparently-cited educational information. By helping people make the connection that veganism—far from an extreme way of life—is simply aligning our actions with the values we already have, Bite Size Vegan strives to end the pervasive exploitation of non-human animals.
How to support the podcast:
Follow Plant Based Briefing on social media:
Twitter: @PlantBasedBrief
YouTube: YouTube.com/PlantBasedBriefing
Facebook: Facebook.com/PlantBasedBriefing
LinkedIn: Plant Based Briefing Podcast
Instagram: @PlantBasedBriefing
#vegan #plantbased #veganpodcast #plantbasedpodcast #plantbasedbriefing #bitesizevegan #speciesism #animalrights #grief #animalemotions #animalsentience #sentient #emotions #elephants #gorillas #chimpanzees #Dolphins #cows #horses #chickens #animalgrief

1,086 Listeners

3,455 Listeners

884 Listeners

494 Listeners

3,403 Listeners

643 Listeners

2,637 Listeners

4,916 Listeners

466 Listeners

2,324 Listeners

838 Listeners

580 Listeners

133 Listeners

326 Listeners

1,089 Listeners