Peter (David Albert) Singer, (born July 6, 1946, Melbourne, Vic., Austl.), Australian philosopher and animal rights advocate. He taught at Monash University (1977–99) and thereafter at the Center for Human Values at Princeton University. His 1975 book Animal Liberation helped popularize the animal rights movement. Singer argued that beings are deserving of moral consideration by virtue of their capacity to feel pleasure and pain, not on the basis of their sex, race, abilities, or species; to think otherwise is to endorse a prejudice, “speciesism,” that is no different from racism or sexism. Since the use of animals for food and in scientific research produces great suffering for animals but generally only small benefits for humans, these practices are almost always immoral, according to the utilitarianism Singer advocates. His stands on some other issues in bioethics, such as his view that the active euthanasia of severely disabled human infants is sometimes morally permissible, have generated considerable controversy.
Peter Singer Article
Peter (David Albert) Singer summary
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vegetarianism Summary
Vegetarianism, the theory or practice of living solely upon vegetables, fruits, grains, legumes, and nuts—with or without the addition of milk products and eggs—generally for ethical, ascetic, environmental, or nutritional reasons. All forms of flesh (meat, fowl, and seafood) are excluded from all
environmentalism Summary
Environmentalism, political and ethical movement that seeks to improve and protect the quality of the natural environment through changes to environmentally harmful human activities; through the adoption of forms of political, economic, and social organization that are thought to be necessary for,
ethics Summary
Ethics, the discipline concerned with what is morally good and bad and morally right and wrong. The term is also applied to any system or theory of moral values or principles. (Read Britannica’s biography of this author, Peter Singer.) How should we live? Shall we aim at happiness or at knowledge,