01076nas a2200145 4500000000100000008004100001260001600042100001800058700002100076700002000097245003900117856005600156300001200212520070600224 2019 d c2019bBrill1 aJohn P. Gluck1 aKathrin Herrmann1 aKimberley Jayne00aAfterword: Evidence over Interests uhttps://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctvjhzq0f.36 a689-6913 aAfter years of science education, teaching experience, and research practice, which focused on the use of non-human primates as potential models of human psychological disorders, a young student in my primate behavior class amiably, but insistently, suggested my preparation was incomplete. She asked me to read Peter Singer’s book Animal Liberation , which had been published two years earlier, in 1975. I had been lecturing in class about the effects of early experience on the rhesus monkey’s ( Macaca mulatta ) social and intellectual development, and my descriptions of the invasive research interventions and behavioral consequences encouraged her to make the book suggestion.