¶ … Famine, Affluence, Morality," Peter Singer, discuss: a. Explain Singer's goal article, present Singer's argument supports position. b. Explain counter-arguments Singer's position addresses article, summarize Singer's responses counter-arguments.
"Famine, affluence, and morality" by Peter Singer
In his essay "Famine, affluence, and morality," Peter Singer asks why the major industrial nations of the world fail to act in assisting poorer and destitute nations, despite the fact they have enough resources to do so. Singer argues that it is just as immoral for a First World nation to refuse to offer aid to a nation in the developing world as it is to refuse to save a child from drowning in a shallow pond if the personal risks and costs to the individual are nil other than getting one's clothes dirty. The reasons we do not aid these countries is because they subjectively seem very far away, even though real children are dying (Singer 1972: 231-232). There is no inherent moral difference between a neighborhood child and a Bengali child other than our irrational horror at the prospect of one dying in light of our relative indifference to the other. Singer's goal in writing his essay is a very practical one: to actively encourage his readers to engage in charitable gift-giving on a level they might consider good but not 'necessary' in the past.
Singer argues that the idea that because 'everyone else' is...
Mill believed that any act may itself be inherently moral, so long as the outcome of that action produces a benign effect. Mill believed that the most ethical act is that which produces the most good, even if the act itself is one which is traditionally considered evil. An example of utilitarian philosophy would include the killing of innocent animals to determine a cure for some infectious disease. And
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