There is no Animal in the general singular, separated from man by a single, indivisible limit. We have to envisage the existence of "living creatures,” whose plurality cannot be assembled within the single figure of an animality that is simply opposed to humanity. ... The confusion of all nonhuman living creatures within the general and common category of the animal is not simply a sin against rigorous thinking, vigilance, lucidity, or empirical authority, it is also a crime. Not a crime against animality, precisely, but a crime of the first order against the animals, against animals. (Jacques Derrida)

There is no Animal in the general singular, separated from man by a single, indivisible limit. We have to envisage the existence of "living creatures,” whose plurality cannot be assembled within the single figure of an animality that is simply opposed to humanity. ... The confusion of all nonhuman living creatures within the general and common category of the animal is not simply a sin against rigorous thinking, vigilance, lucidity, or empirical authority, it is also a crime. Not a crime against animality, precisely, but a crime of the first order against the animals, against animals.

Jacques Derrida

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animal animality authority category common confusion crime existence figure general humanity indivisible limit living lucidity man order plurality sin single singular thinking vigilance nonhuman

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