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Peter Singer
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{{Short description|Australian moral philosopher (born 1946)}}{{other people}}{{Use Australian English|date=July 2013}}{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2022}}







factoids
| image = Peter Singer 2017 (cropped).jpg| image_size = | alt = | caption = Singer in 2017| birth_name = Peter Albert David Singerdf=yes07URL=HTTPS://WWW.BRITANNICA.COM/BIOGRAPHY/PETER-SINGER FIRST=BRIAN ACCESS-DATE=11 JULY 2022 ARCHIVE-URL=HTTPS://WEB.ARCHIVE.ORG/WEB/20220710011656/HTTPS://WWW.BRITANNICA.COM/BIOGRAPHY/PETER-SINGER, live, Melbourne, Victoria (Australia)>Victoria, Australia| death_date = | death_place = Renata Diamond|1968}}| children = 3 University of Melbourne (Bachelor of Arts>BA, MA)| University College, Oxford (BPhil)}}| alma_mater = | occupation = | notable_works = {{Unbulleted listAnimal Liberation (book)>Animal Liberation (1975)| Practical Ethics (1979)| The Life You Can Save (2009)}}| awards = {{Unbulleted list| Berggruen Prize (2021)| BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award (2022)}}| signature = | signature_size = | signature_alt = Analytic philosophy|Utilitarianism}}University College, Oxford>University of Oxford| New York University| La Trobe University| Monash University| Princeton University| University of Melbourne}}| thesis_title = Why Should I Be Moral?| thesis_url =weblink| thesis_year = 1969| doctoral_advisor = | academic_advisors = R. M. Hare (BPhil advisor)| doctoral_students = | notable_students = | language = Applied ethics|Bioethics}}| Equal consideration of interests| Speciesism | Drowning child analogy| Effective altruismArgument from marginal casesHTTPS://WWW.IEP.UTM.EDU/ANIM-ETH ENCYCLOPEDIA=INTERNET ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PHILOSOPHY ARCHIVE-DATE=1 MARCH 2022 URL-STATUS=LIVE, | Personism}}weblink|petersinger.info}}Australian Greens>Greens}}Peter Albert David Singer {{post-nominals|country=AUS|AC|FAHA}} (born 6 July 1946) is an Australian moral philosopher who is Emeritus Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University. Singer's work specialises in applied ethics, approaching the subject from a secular, utilitarian perspective. He wrote the book Animal Liberation (1975), in which he argues for vegetarianism, and the essay "Famine, Affluence, and Morality", which argues the moral imperative of donating to help the poor around the world. For most of his career, he was a preference utilitarian. He revealed in The Point of View of the Universe (2014), coauthored with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek, that he had become a hedonistic utilitarian.On two occasions, Singer served as chair of the philosophy department at Monash University, where he founded its Centre for Human Bioethics. In 1996, he stood unsuccessfully as a Greens candidate for the Australian Senate. In 2004, Singer was recognised as the Australian Humanist of the Year by the Council of Australian Humanist Societies. In 2005, The Sydney Morning Herald placed him among Australia's ten most influential public intellectuals.NEWS, Visontay, Michael, Australia's top 100 public intellectuals,weblink 27 October 2018, The Sydney Morning Herald, 12 March 2005, 19 December 2021,weblink live, Singer is a cofounder of Animals Australia and the founder of the non-profit organization The Life You Can Save.WEB,weblink The Life You Can Save, 25 April 2019, 21 September 2023,weblink live,

Early life and education

(File:Singer1.jpg|thumb|Singer in 2009)Peter Singer was born in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia,WEB, About Peter Singer,weblink Peter Singer, 12 June 2022, 13 June 2022,weblink dead, on 6 July 1946. His parents were Austrian Jews who immigrated to Australia from Vienna after Austria's annexation (Anschluss) by Nazi Germany in 1938,WEB, Thompson, Peter, Talking Heads – Peter Singer, Australian Broadcasting Corporation,weblink 28 May 2007, 27 October 2018,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130525095518weblink">weblink 25 May 2013, and settled in Melbourne. His grandparents were less fortunate: his paternal grandparents were taken by the Nazis to Łódź, and were most likely murdered, since they were never heard from again; his maternal grandfather David Ernst Oppenheim (1881–1943), an educator and psychologist who collaborated with Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler, was murdered in the Theresienstadt concentration camp.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Pushing Time Away: My Grandfather and the Tragedy of Jewish Vienna, Fourth Estate, 2003, 0-7322-7742-6, Pymble, NSW, Chapter 33–Theresienstadt, Oppenheim was a member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society and wrote a joint article with Sigmund Freud, before joining the Adlerian Society for Individual Psychology.BOOK, Mühlleitner, Elke, Biographisches Lexikon der Psychoanalyse: Die Mitglieder der Psychologischen Mittwoch-Gesellschaft und der Wiener Psychoanalytischen Vereinigung 1902–1938, Tübingen, 1992, Edition Diskord, 239–240, 978-3-89295-557-3, de, Singer later wrote a biography of Oppenheim.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Pushing Time Away: My Grandfather and the Tragedy of Jewish Vienna,weblink 2007, 27 October 2018, Fourth Estate, 978-0-7322-7742-0, Singer is an atheist and was raised in a prosperous, non-religious family.WEB, Peter Singer,weblink 3 February 2019, What Is It Like to Be a Philosopher?, 3 February 2019,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20190203204234weblink">weblink live, His father had a successful business importing tea and coffee. His family rarely observed Jewish holidays, and Singer declined to have a Bar Mitzvah.NEWS, Specter, Michael, Ethics Man,weblinkweblink 26 May 2022, subscription, live, 27 October 2018, The Independent, 21 November 1999, Singer attended Preshil,Suzannah Pearce, ed. (17 November 2006). "RICHARDSON (Sue) Susan." Who's Who in Australia Live! North Melbourne, Vic: Crown Content Pty Ltd. and later Scotch College. After leaving school, Singer studied law, history, and philosophy as a resident of Ormond College at the University of Melbourne, earning a bachelor's degree in 1967.NEWS,weblink Vulliamy, Ed, 15 February 2009, 27 October 2018, Peter Singer, London, The Guardian, 3 June 2019,weblink live, Singer explained that he elected to major in philosophy after his interest was piqued by discussions with his sister's then-boyfriend.WEB,weblink Peter Singer: Eine bessere Welt für Mensch und Tier, Peter Singer: A Better World for People and Animals, Universität Graz, Graz, Austria, 11 June 2017, 26 Mar 2024, 30 December 2019,weblink live, video, 5:33, YouTube, He earned a master's degree for a thesis entitled Why Should I Be Moral? at the same university in 1969. He was awarded a scholarship to study at the University of Oxford and obtained from there a Bachelor of Philosophy in 1971 with a thesis on civil disobedience supervised by R. M. Hare and published as a book in 1973.BOOK, Peter, Singer, Democracy and Disobedience,weblink registration, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1973, 978-0-19-824504-9, Singer names Hare, Australian philosopher H. J. McCloskey and British philosopher J. L. H. Thomas, who taught him "how to read and understand Hegel",WEB, Peter Singer,weblink 10 October 2023, 16 October 2023,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20231016113747weblink">weblink live, as his most important mentors.WEB, Appel, Jacob M., Interview with Peter Singer: Philosopher as Educator, Education Update Online, July 2004,weblink 27 October 2018, 8 November 2017,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20171108145154weblink">weblink live, In the preface to Hegel: A Very Short Introduction,BOOK, Singer, Peter, Peter Singer, 2001, Hegel: A Very Short Introduction,weblink Oxford University Press, xi, 10.1093/actrade/9780192801975.001.0001, 9780191775468, Singer recalls his time in Thomas' "remarkable" classes at Oxford where students were forced to "probe passages of the Phenomenology sentence by sentence, until they yielded their meaning". One day at Balliol College in Oxford, he had what he refers to as probably the decisive formative experience of his life. He was having a discussion after class with fellow graduate student Richard Keshen, who would later become a professor at Cape Breton University. During their lunch Keshen opted to have a salad after being told that the spaghetti sauce contained meat. Singer had the spaghetti. Singer eventually questioned Keshen about his reason for avoiding meat. Keshen explained his ethical objections. Singer would later state, "I'd never met a vegetarian who gave such a straightforward answer that I could understand and relate to." Keshen later introduced Singer to his vegetarian friends. Singer was able to find one book in which he could read up on the issue (Animal Machines by Ruth Harrison) and within a week or two he approached his wife saying that he thought they needed to make a change to their diet and that he did not think they could justify eating meat.WEB,weblinkweblink 2021-12-11, live, The Ethics of Food: The Making of a Vegetarian and Professor of Bioethics – Peter Singer, YouTube, 27 October 2018, 1 October 2013, 01:02, Voices from Oxford, video, {{cbignore}}WEB,weblink Peter Singer: Eine bessere Welt für Mensch und Tier, Peter Singer: A Better World for People and Animals, YouTube, Universität Graz, Graz, Austria, 11 June 2017, 26 Mar 2024, 22 November 2019,weblink live, 21:04, Denkzeitraum, video, {{block indent|em=1|text=On finding Harrison's book Animal Machines: 23:38. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191230102111weblink |date=30 December 2019 }}.}}BOOK,weblink Writings on an Ethical Life, Peter, Singer, 2000, 258, Open Road Media, 9781497645585, [In this version of the story, Singer writes of his and his wife's conversion happening "Over the next two months".]

Academic career

After spending three years as a Radcliffe lecturer at University College, Oxford, he was a visiting professor at New York University for 16 months. In 1977, he returned to Melbourne where he spent most of his career, aside from appointments as visiting faculty abroad, until his move to Princeton in 1999.Sources:
  • WEB, Peter Singer: About Me,weblink 28 October 2018, 21 June 2023,weblink dead,
  • WEB, Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics,weblink dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20091024030106weblink">weblink 24 October 2009, 28 October 2018,
  • WEB, Peter Singer: Works,weblink 28 October 2018, 6 June 2023,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20230606192656weblink">weblink live,
  • WEB, Peter Singer: Life & Work,weblink 28 October 2018, 5 December 2022,weblink live,
  • WEB, 5 September 2006, Peter Singer: BBC/RSA Iconoclasts series Pt. 1,weblink dead,weblink 12 October 2006, 28 October 2018, London,
  • WEB, Columnist Peter Singer,weblink 28 October 2018, Project Syndicate, 16 August 2023,weblink live,
  • MAGAZINE, Singer, Peter, 1 March 2006, Can You Do Good by Eating Well?,weblink Greater Good Magazine, 28 October 2018, 21 June 2023,weblink live,
  • WEB, Singer, Peter, 5 September 1999, The Singer Solution to World Poverty,weblink 28 October 2018, The New York Times, 4 April 2023,weblink live,
  • BOOK, Singer, Peter, Regan, Tom, Singer, Peter, Animal Rights and Human Obligations, 1989, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 978-0-13-036864-5, 148–162, 2nd, All Animals are Equal,
In June 2011, Singer joined the professoriate of New College of the Humanities, a private college in London, in addition to his work at Princeton.WEB,weblink The professoriate, New College of the Humanities, 28 October 2018, 17 September 2021,weblink dead, Singer gave his last lecture at Princeton in 2023, and has retired.WEB,weblink Students laud Peter Singer's teaching at the end of career that has courted controversy, He has been a regular contributor to Project Syndicate since 2001.WEB, 2020-02-03, Peter Singer,weblink 2024-04-08, Project Syndicate, en, According to philosopher Helga Kuhse, Singer is almost certainly the best-known and most widely read of all contemporary philosophers.BOOK, Unsanctifying human life: Essays on ethics, 2002, Blackwell, New York, 978-0-631-22507-2, Kuhse, Helga, 2, Michael Specter wrote that Singer is among the most influential of contemporary philosophers. He co-founded the open-access Journal of Controversial Ideas along with bioethicist Francesca Minerva and moral philosopher Jeff McMahan in 2018.NEWS, Bartlett, Tom, Here Comes 'The Journal of Controversial Ideas.' Cue the Outcry.,weblink 25 March 2024, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 12 November 2018, limited, NEWS,weblink The Daily Telegraph, 'Controversial ideas' journal where academics can publish under pseudonyms for fear of backlash, Camilla, Turner, 12 November 2018, 25 March 2024, limited,

Applied ethics

{{Original research|section|date=March 2024}}{{Utilitarianism|Proponents}}Singer's Practical Ethics (1979) analyzes why and how living beings' interests should be weighed. His principle of equal consideration of interests does not dictate equal treatment of all those with interests, since different interests warrant different treatment. While all have an interest in avoiding pain, relatively few have an interest in cultivating their abilities. Not only does his principle justify different treatment for different interests, but it allows different treatment for the same interest when diminishing marginal utility is a factor. For example, this approach would privilege a starving person's interest in food over the same interest of someone who is only slightly hungry. Among the more important human interests are those in avoiding pain, in developing one's abilities, in satisfying basic needs for food and shelter, in enjoying warm personal relationships, in being free to pursue one's projects without interference, "and many others". The fundamental interest that entitles a being to equal consideration is the capacity for "suffering and/or enjoyment or happiness". Singer holds that a being's interests should always be weighed according to that being's concrete needs. Ethical conduct is justified by reasons that go beyond prudence to "something bigger than the individual", addressing a larger audience. Singer thinks this going-beyond identifies moral reasons as "somehow universal", specifically in the injunction to 'love thy neighbour as thyself', interpreted by him as demanding that one give the same weight to the interests of others as one gives to one's own interests. This universalising step, which Singer traces from Immanuel Kant to Hare,BOOK, Peter, Singer, Practical Ethics, Cambridge University Press, 2nd, 1993, 978-0-521-43971-8, {{rp|11}}is crucial and sets him apart from those moral theorists, from Thomas Hobbes to David Gauthier, who tie morality to prudence. Universalisation leads directly to utilitarianism, Singer argues, on the strength of the thought that one's own interests cannot count for more than the interests of others.Animal Liberation, pp. 211, 256{{Full citation needed|date=March 2024}}The utilitarian conclusion is that one must adopt the course of action that likely maximises the weighted interests of those affected. Singer's universalising step applies to interests without reference to who has them, whereas the Kantian's applies to the judgments of rational agents (for example in Kant's kingdom of Ends or John Rawls's original position). Singer regards Kantian universalisation as unjust to animals. As for the Hobbesians, Singer attempts a response in the final chapter of Practical Ethics, arguing that self-interested reasons support adoption of the moral point of view, such as "the paradox of hedonism", which counsels that happiness is best found by not looking for it, and the need most people feel to relate to something larger than their own concerns. Singer identifies as a sentientist; sentientism is an ethical position that grants moral consideration to all sentient beings.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Animal Liberation, Harper Collins, 2009, 978-0-06-171130-5, {{Page needed|date=March 2024}}

Effective altruism and world poverty

File:Peter Singer - Effective Altruism -Melb Australia Aug 2015.jpg|thumb|Singer at an effective altruism conference in MelbourneMelbourneSinger's ideas have contributed to the rise of effective altruism.ENCYCLOPEDIA, Jollimore, Troy, Impartiality,weblink Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, 28 October 2018, 6 February 2017, 25 August 2021,weblink live, He argues that people should try not only to reduce suffering but to reduce it in the most effective manner possible. While Singer has previously written at length about the moral imperative to reduce poverty and eliminate the suffering of nonhuman animals, particularly in the meat industry, he writes about how the effective altruism movement is doing these things more effectively in his 2015 book The Most Good You Can Do. He is a board member of Animal Charity Evaluators, a charity evaluator used by many members of the effective altruism community which recommends the most cost-effective animal advocacy charities and interventions.WEB, Board of Directors,weblink 28 October 2018, Animal Charity Evaluators, 22 January 2021,weblink live, His own organisation, The Life You Can Save (TLYCS), recommends a selection of charities deemed by charity evaluators such as GiveWell to be the most effective when it comes to helping those in extreme poverty. TLYCS was founded after Singer released his 2009 eponymous book, in which he argues more generally in favour of giving to charities that help to end global poverty. In particular, he expands upon some of the arguments made in his 1972 essay "Famine, Affluence, and Morality", in which he posits that citizens of rich nations are morally obligated to give at least some of their disposable income to charities that help the global poor. He supports this using the "drowning child analogy", which states that most people would rescue a drowning child from a pond, even if it meant that their expensive clothes were ruined. He argues that similarly, lives could be saved, notably by donating to effective charities, and that as a result a significant portion of the money spent on unnecessary possessions should instead be donate to charity.WEB, 1997-04-05, The Drowning Child and the Expanding Circle,weblink 2024-04-08, New Internationalist, en, NEWS, Skelton, Anthony, 12 March 2009, The Globe and Mail, Nobody can do everything, but everyone can do something,weblink 28 October 2018, 23 September 2020,weblink live, Since November 2009, Singer is a member of Giving What We Can, an international organisation whose members pledge to give at least 10% of their income to effective charities.WEB, Giving What We Can,weblink Members, September 25, 2020, 12 May 2020,weblink live,

Animal liberation and speciesism

File:Peter Singer no Fronteiras do Pensamento São Paulo 2013 (9733467088).jpg|thumb|Singer in São PauloSão PauloPublished in 1975, Animal Liberation has been cited as a formative influence on leaders of the modern animal liberation movement.WEB,weblink Karen Dawn's Biography, ThankingTheMonkey.com, 28 October 2018, 24 September 2020,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20200924063638weblink">weblink live, The central argument of the book is an expansion of the utilitarian concept that "the greatest good of the greatest number" is the only measure of good or ethical behaviour, and Singer believes that there is no reason not to apply this principle to other animals, arguing that the boundary between human and "animal" is completely arbitrary. For example, there are far more differences between a great ape and an oyster than between a human and a great ape, and yet the former two are lumped together as "animals", whereas we are considered "human" in a way that supposedly differentiates us from all other "animals". He popularised the term "speciesism", which had been coined by English writer Richard D. Ryder to describe the practice of privileging humans over other animals, and therefore argues in favour of the equal consideration of interests of all sentient beings.BOOK, Waldau, Paul, The Specter of Speciesism: Buddhist and Christian Views of Animals, 2002, Oxford University Press, 978-0-19-514571-7, 5, 23–29, In Animal Liberation, Singer argues in favour of vegetarianism and against most animal experimentation. He stated in a 2006 interview that he does not eat meat and that he has been a vegetarian since 1971. He also said that he has "gradually become increasingly vegan" and that "I am largely vegan but I'm a flexible vegan. I don't go to the supermarket and buy non-vegan stuff for myself. But when I'm traveling or going to other people's places I will be quite happy to eat vegetarian rather than vegan."WEB, Gilson, Dave, Chew the Right Thing,weblink 2023-03-20, Mother Jones, en-US, 17 February 2022,weblink live, In 2022, Singer stated that he is not fully vegan because he occasionally consumes oysters, mussels, and clams due to their lack of a central nervous system.WEB, Kyung-mi, Lee, 9 August 2022, Why go vegan? Peter Singer answers,weblink 2023-03-20, The Hankyoreh, 20 March 2023,weblink live, According to Singer, meat-eating can be ethically permissible if "farms really give the animals good lives, and then humanely kill them, preferably without transporting them to slaughterhouses or disturbing them. In Animal Liberation, I don't really say that it's the killing that makes [meat-eating] wrong, it's the suffering."WEB, Eaton, George, 2021-05-26, Peter Singer: Why the case for veganism is stronger than ever,weblink 2023-03-20, New Statesman, en-US, 20 March 2023,weblink live, In an article for the online publication Chinadialogue, Singer called Western-style meat production cruel, unhealthy, and damaging to the ecosystem.NEWS, Singer, Peter, 30 August 2006, The ethics of eating,weblink 28 October 2018, China Dialogue, 26 June 2019,weblink live, He rejected the idea that the method was necessary to meet the population's increasing demand, explaining that animals in factory farms have to eat food grown explicitly for them, and they burn up most of the food's energy just to breathe and keep their bodies warm. In a 2010 Guardian article he titled, "Fish: the forgotten victims on our plate", Singer drew attention to the welfare of fish. He quoted author Alison Mood's startling statistics from a report she wrote, which was released on fishcount.org.uk just a month before the Guardian article. Singer states that she "has put together what may well be the first-ever systematic estimate of the size of the annual global capture of wild fish. It is, she calculates, in the order of one trillion, although it could be as high as 2.7tn."NEWS,weblink Fish: the forgotten victims on our plate, 14 September 2010, The Guardian, 28 October 2018, 0261-3077, 28 February 2021,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20210228165247weblink">weblink live, BOOK,weblink Worse things happen at sea: the welfare of wild-caught fish, Mood, Alison, fishcount.org.uk, 2010, 28 October 2018, 18 August 2021,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20210818003057weblink">weblink live, {{efn|Singer erroneously quotes the estimated number of fish as tonnage rather than a count of individuals. The actual range is 970 billion to 2.7 trillion individual fish, approximated from the total catch of 77 million tons.}}Some chapters of Animal Liberation are dedicated to criticising testing on animals. Unlike groups such as PETA, Singer is willing to accept testing when there is a clear benefit for medicine. In November 2006, Singer appeared on the BBC programme Monkeys, Rats and Me: Animal Testing and said that he felt that Tipu Aziz's experiments on monkeys for research into treating Parkinson's disease could be justified.NEWS, Mangan, Lucy, 28 November 2006, London, The Guardian, Last night's TV,weblink 28 October 2018, 15 May 2021,weblink live, Whereas Singer has continued since the publication of Animal Liberation to promote vegetarianism and veganism, he has been much less vocal in recent years on the subject of animal experimentation. Singer has defended some of the actions of the Animal Liberation Front such as the stealing of footage from Thomas Gennarelli's laboratory in May 1984 (as shown in the documentary Unnecessary Fuss) but condemned other actions such as the use of explosives by some animal-rights activists, and sees the freeing of captive animals as largely futile when they are easily replaced.BOOK, Singer, Peter, 2011a, Practical Ethics, 3rd, Cambridge University Press, 274, 978-1-139-49689-6, BOOK, Singer, Peter, 2015, Animal Liberation, Random House, xxix, 978-1-4735-2442-2, Preface, revised, Singer features in the 2017 documentary Empathy, directed by Ed Antoja, which aims to promote a more respectful way of life towards all animals. The documentary won the "Public Choice Award" of the Greenpeace Film Festival.WEB, Projection de film : Empathy (Complet),weblink 2021-05-13, VegEvents, en-US, 14 May 2021,weblink live, Singer has frequently collaborated on op-eds and otherwise with animal rights advocate Karen Dawn.NEWS, Singer, Peter, Dawn, Karen, Op-Ed: Harambe the gorilla dies, meat-eaters grieve,weblink Los Angeles Times, 5 June 2016, 1 January 2024, 1 January 2024,weblink live, NEWS, Kateman, Brian, How to stop cruel factory farming: start with one animal,weblink Vox, 19 June 2017, en, 1 January 2024, 1 January 2024,weblink live, NEWS, Singer, Peter, Dawn, Karen, Op-Ed: Thinking of giving up red meat? Half measures may end up increasing animal suffering,weblink Los Angeles Times, 16 October 2016, 1 January 2024, 1 January 2024,weblink live,

Other views

Meta-ethical views

In the past, Singer did not hold that objective moral values exist, on the basis that reason could favour both egoism and equal consideration of interests. Singer himself adopted utilitarianism on the basis that people's preferences can be universalised, leading to a situation where one takes the "point of view of the universe" and "an impartial standpoint". In the second edition of Practical Ethics, he concedes that the question of why we should act morally "cannot be given an answer that will provide everyone with overwhelming reasons for acting morally".{{rp|335}}When co-authoring The Point of View of the Universe (2014), Singer shifted to the position that objective moral values do exist, and defends the 19th century utilitarian philosopher Henry Sidgwick's view that objective morality can be derived from fundamental moral axioms that are knowable by reason. Additionally, he endorses Derek Parfit's view that there are object-given reasons for action.BOOK, De Lazari-Radek, Katarzyna, Singer, Peter, The Point of View of the Universe: Sidgwick and Contemporary Ethics, 2014, Oxford University Press, 978-0-19-960369-5, {{rp|126}} Furthermore, Singer and Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek (the co-author of the book) argue that evolutionary debunking arguments can be used to demonstrate that it is more rational to take the impartial standpoint of "the point of view of the universe", as opposed to egoism—pursuing one's own self-interest—because the existence of egoism is more likely to be the product of evolution by natural selection, rather than because it is correct, whereas taking an impartial standpoint and equally considering the interests of all sentient beings is in conflict with what we would expect from natural selection, meaning that it is more likely that impartiality in ethics is the correct stance to pursue.{{rp|182–183}}

Political views

(File:Peter Singer 2017-01 (cropped).jpg|thumb|Singer in 2017)Whilst a student in Melbourne, Singer campaigned against the Vietnam War as president of the Melbourne University Campaign Against Conscription.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Schaler, Jeffrey A., Peter Singer Under Fire: The Moral Iconoclast Faces His Critics, 2011b, Open Court Publishing, Chicago, 978-0-8126-9769-8, 7, An Intellectual Autobiography, He also spoke publicly for the legalisation of abortion in Australia. Singer joined the Australian Labor Party in 1974 business but resigned after disillusionment with the centrist leadership of Bob Hawke; in 1992, he became a founding member of the Victorian Greens.{{sfnp|Singer|2011b|pp=58–59}} He has run for political office twice for the Greens: he received 28% of the vote in the 1994 Kooyong by-election, and received 3% of the vote in 1996 when running for the Australian Senate (elected by proportional representation).{{sfnp|Singer|2011b|pp=58–59}} Before the 1996 election, he co-authored a book The Greens with Bob Brown.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Brown, Bob, 1996, The Greens, Text Publishing Company, 978-1-875847-17-4, In A Darwinian Left, Singer outlines a plan for the political left to adapt to the lessons of evolutionary biology. He says that evolutionary psychology suggests that humans naturally tend to be self-interested. He further argues that the evidence that selfish tendencies are natural must not be taken as evidence that selfishness is "right". He concludes that game theory (the mathematical study of strategy) and experiments in psychology offer hope that self-interested people would make short-term sacrifices for the good of others, if society provides the right conditions.BOOK, Peter, Singer, A Darwinian Left: Politics, Evolution, and Cooperation, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2000, 978-0-300-08323-1, Singer argues that although humans possess selfish, competitive tendencies naturally, they have a substantial capacity for cooperation that also has been selected for during human evolution. Singer's writing in Greater Good magazine, published by the Greater Good Science Center of the University of California, Berkeley, explores scientific studies on why people are compassionate, selfless, and capable of forming peaceful relationships. Singer has criticised the United States for receiving "oil from countries run by dictators ... who pocket most of the" financial gains, thus "keeping the people in poverty". Singer believes that the wealth of these countries "should belong to the people" within them rather than their "de facto government. In paying dictators for their oil, we are in effect buying stolen goods, and helping to keep people in poverty." Singer holds that America "should be doing more to assist people in extreme poverty". He is disappointed in U.S. foreign aid policy, deeming it "a very small proportion of our GDP, less than a quarter of some other affluent nations." Singer maintains that little "private philanthropy from the U.S." is "directed to helping people in extreme poverty, although there are some exceptions, most notably, of course, the Gates Foundation."WEB,weblink Interview: How do practical ethics work in the average American's life? Peter Singer explains., Cotto, Joseph Ford, 26 September 2017, San Francisco Review of Books, 28 October 2018,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20171031215904weblink">weblink 31 October 2017, Singer describes himself as not anti-capitalist, stating in a 2010 interview with the New Left Project: "Capitalism is very far from a perfect system, but so far we have yet to find anything that clearly does a better job of meeting human needs than a regulated capitalist economy coupled with a welfare and health care system that meets the basic needs of those who do not thrive in the capitalist economy."WEB, Singer, Peter, Lewis, Edward, 16 March 2010, Ethics and the Left,weblink dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20181028225703weblink">weblink 28 October 2018, 28 October 2018, Newleftproject.org, Singer added that "[i]f we ever do find a better system, I'll be happy to call myself an anti-capitalist." Similarly, in his book Marx, Singer is sympathetic to Karl Marx's criticism of capitalism but is sceptical about whether a better system is likely to be created, writing: "Marx saw that capitalism is a wasteful, irrational system, a system which controls us when we should be controlling it. That insight is still valid; but we can now see that the construction of a free and equal society is a more difficult task than Marx realised."BOOK, Peter, Singer, Marx: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2000, 100,weblink registration, 978-0-19-285405-6, 28 October 2018, Singer is opposed to the death penalty, claiming that it does not effectively deter the crimes for which it is the punitive measure,WEB,weblink The Death Penalty – Again, Project Syndicate, 12 October 2011, Peter, Singer, 28 October 2018, 7 September 2017,weblink live, and that he cannot see any other justification for it.INTERVIEW, Singer, Peter, Julia Taylor Kennedy, Ethics Matter: Conversation with Moral Philosopher Peter Singer,weblink 13 July 2023, Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, 13 October 2011, Ethics Matter Interview Series, 13 July 2023,weblink live, In 2010, Singer signed a petition renouncing his right of return to Israel because it is "a form of racist privilege that abets the colonial oppression of the Palestinians."NEWS, Dan, Goldberg,weblink Peter Singer: is he really the most dangerous man in the world?, The Jewish Chronicle, 16 August 2012, 28 October 2018, 5 December 2022,weblink dead, Singer called on Jill Stein to withdraw from the 2016 United States presidential election in states that were close between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump on the grounds that the stakes were "too high".WEB,weblink Peter, Singer, Greens for Trump?, Project Syndicate, 11 August 2016, 28 October 2018, 24 July 2023,weblink live, He argued against the view that there was no significant difference between Clinton and Trump, whilst also saying that he would not advocate such a tactic in Australia's electoral system, which allows for ranking of preferences. When writing in 2017 on Trump's climate change denial and plans to withdraw from the Paris Accords, Singer advocated a boycott of all consumer goods from the United States to pressure the Trump administration to change its environmental policies.WEB,weblink Boycott America?, Singer, Peter, 6 April 2017, Project Syndicate, 28 October 2018, 20 June 2023,weblink live, WEB,weblink Is the Paris Accord Unfair to America?, Singer, Peter, 5 June 2017, Project Syndicate, 28 October 2018, 20 June 2023,weblink live, In 2021, Singer described the war on drugs as an expensive, ineffective and extremely harmful policy.WEB, Plant, Michael, Singer, Peter, 2021-05-04, Why drugs should be not only decriminalised, but fully legalised,weblink 2021-05-22, www.newstatesman.com, en, 12 August 2021,weblink live,

Euthanasia and infanticide

File:Peter Singer.jpg|thumb|Singer lecturing at Oxford UniversityOxford UniversitySinger has argued that the right to life is essentially tied to a being's capacity to hold preferences.NEWS, Johnson, Harriet McBryde, February 16, 2003, Unspeakable Conversations,weblink In Practical Ethics, Singer argues in favour of abortion rights on the grounds that fetuses are neither rational nor self-aware, and can therefore hold no preferences. As a result, he argues that the preference of a mother to have an abortion automatically takes precedence. In sum, Singer argues that a fetus lacks personhood. Similar to his argument for abortion rights, Singer argues that newborns lack the essential characteristics of personhood—"rationality, autonomy, and self-consciousness"Taking Life: Humans {{Webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170205000916weblink |date=5 February 2017}}, Excerpted from Practical Ethics, 2nd edition, 1993—and therefore "killing a newborn baby is never equivalent to killing a person, that is, a being who wants to go on living".WEB, Singer, Peter,weblink Peter Singer FAQ, 28 October 2018, 22 June 2023,weblink dead, Singer has clarified that his "view of when life begins isn't very different from that of opponents of abortion." He deems it not "unreasonable to hold that an individual human life begins at conception. If it doesn't, then it begins about 14 days later, when it is no longer possible for the embryo to divide into twins or other multiples." Singer disagrees with abortion rights opponents in that he does not "think that the fact that an embryo is a living human being is sufficient to show that it is wrong to kill it." Singer wishes "to see American jurisprudence, and the national abortion debate, take up the question of which capacities a human being needs to have in order for it to be wrong to kill it" as well as "when, in the development of the early human being, these capacities are present."WEB,weblink When does human life begin -- and what does this really mean? Peter Singer explains., Cotto, Joseph Ford, San Francisco Review of Books, 27 September 2017, 28 October 2018,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20210117062913weblink">weblink 17 January 2021, Singer classifies euthanasia as voluntary, involuntary, or non-voluntary. Voluntary euthanasia is that to which the subject consents. He argues in favour of voluntary euthanasia and some forms of non-voluntary euthanasia, including infanticide in certain instances, but opposes involuntary euthanasia. Bioethicists associated with the disability rights and disability studies communities have argued that his epistemology is based on ableist conceptions of disability.BOOK, Writings on an Ethical Life, Peter, Singer, An Interview, 2001, 319–329, Fourth Estate, 978-1-84115-550-0, Singer's positions have also been criticised by some advocates for disability rights and right-to-life supporters, concerned with what they see as his attacks upon human dignity. Religious critics have argued that Singer's ethics ignores and undermines the traditional notion of the sanctity of life. Singer agrees and believes the notion of the sanctity of life ought to be discarded as outdated, unscientific, and irrelevant to understanding problems in contemporary bioethics.Singer, Peter Rithinking Life and Death: The Collapse of our Traditional Ethics, Text Publishing, 1994. Disability rights activists have held many protests against Singer at Princeton University and at his lectures over the years. Singer has replied that many people judge him based on secondhand summaries and short quotations taken out of context, not on his books or articles, and that his aim is to elevate the status of animals, not to lower that of humans.{{sfnp|Singer|1993|pp=77–78|ps=. "[T]he aim of my argument is to elevate the status of animals rather than to lower the status of any humans"}}American publisher Steve Forbes ceased his donations to Princeton University in 1999 because of Singer's appointment to a prestigious professorship.WEB,weblink Steve Forbes Declines Princeton Financial Backing Due to Singer Hiring, Euthanasia.com, 21 September 1999, 28 October 2018, 11 February 2022,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20220211071438weblink">weblink live, Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal wrote to organisers of a Swedish book fair to which Singer was invited that "[a] professor of morals ... who justifies the right to kill handicapped newborns ... is in my opinion unacceptable for representation at your level."WEB, Don, Felder,weblink Professor Death will fit right in at Princeton, Jewish World Review, 28 October 1998, 28 October 2018, 20 June 2023,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20230620230732weblink">weblink live, Conservative psychiatrist Theodore Dalrymple wrote in 2010 that Singerian moral universalism is "preposterous—psychologically, theoretically, and practically".BOOK, Dalrymple, Theodore, Spoilt Rotten: The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality, Gibson Square Books Ltd, 2010, 978-1-906142-61-2, 226, Spoilt Rotten: The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality, In 2002, disability rights activist Harriet McBryde Johnson debated Singer, challenging his belief that it is morally permissible to euthanise newborn children with severe disabilities. "Unspeakable Conversations", Johnson's account of her encounters with Singer and the pro-euthanasia movement, was published in the New York Times Magazine in 2003.MAGAZINE,weblink Harriet, McBryde Johnson, Unspeakable Conversations, The New York Times Magazine, 16 February 2003, 28 October 2018, 13 August 2023,weblink live, In 2015, Singer debated Archbishop Anthony Fisher on the legalisation of euthanasia at Sydney Town Hall.MAGAZINE,weblink Amy, Corderoy, Euthanasia debate: Archbishop Anthony Fisher and ethicist Peter Singer to debate euthanasia, The Sydney Morning Herald, 8 August 2015, 6 October 2021, 22 June 2023,weblink live, Singer rejected arguments that legalising euthanasia would result in a slippery slope where the practice might become widespread as a means to remove undesirable people for financial or other motives.MAGAZINE,weblink Benjamin, Jones, Singer and Fisher preach to their flocks in euthanasia debate, The Conversation, 14 August 2015, 6 October 2021, 22 June 2023,weblink live, Singer has experienced the complexities of some of these questions in his own life. His mother had Alzheimer's disease. He said, "I think this has made me see how the issues of someone with these kinds of problems are really very difficult."MAGAZINE, Specter, Michael, Michael Specter, 6 September 1999, The Dangerous Philosopher,weblink 19 July 2023, The New Yorker, 28 October 2021,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20211028200548weblink">weblink live, In an interview with Ronald Bailey, published in December 2000, he explained that his sister shares the responsibility of making decisions about his mother. He said that, if he were solely responsible, his mother might not continue to live.MAGAZINE, Ronald, Bailey,weblink The Pursuit of Happiness, Peter Singer interviewed by Ronald Bailey, December 2000, Reason (magazine), Reason, 28 October 2018, 11 January 2019,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20190111062525weblink">weblink live,

Surrogacy

In 1985, Singer wrote a book with the physician Deanne Wells arguing that surrogate motherhood should be allowed and regulated by the state by establishing nonprofit 'State Surrogacy Boards', which would ensure fairness between surrogate mothers and surrogacy-seeking parents. Singer and Wells endorsed both the payment of medical expenses endured by surrogate mothers and an extra "fair fee" to compensate the surrogate mother.BOOK, Singer, Peter, Wells, Deane, Making Babies: The New Science and Ethics of Conception, 1987, C. Scribner's Sons, BOOK, Rosemarie, Tong, R. G., Frey, Christopher Heath, Wellman, A Companion to Applied Ethics, Chapter 27: Surrogate Motherhood, 376, 978-1-55786-594-6, 2003, Wiley,

Religion

File:Peter Singer MIT Veritas.jpg|thumb|Singer at a Veritas Forum event at MITMITSinger was a speaker at the 2012 Global Atheist Convention.WEB, Peter Singer,weblink dead,weblink" title="archive.today/20131201121355weblink">weblink 1 December 2013, 28 October 2018, Atheist Foundation of Australia, He has debated with Christians including John Lennox and Dinesh D'Souza.WEB, 6 September 2011, Singer vs Lennox: Is There a God?,weblink dead,weblink 27 November 2016, 28 October 2018, ABC News (Australia), ABC News, WEB, Isia, Jaasiewicz,weblink Singer, D'Souza face off over religion and morality, Princeton Alumni Weekly, 28 January 2009, 28 October 2018, 22 June 2023,weblink live, Singer has pointed to the problem of evil as an objection against the Christian conception of God. He stated: "The evidence of our own eyes makes it more plausible to believe that the world was not created by any god at all. If, however, we insist on believing in divine creation, we are forced to admit that the god who made the world cannot be all-powerful and all good. He must be either evil or a bungler."WEB,weblink The God of Suffering?, Peter Singer, Project Syndicate, 8 May 2008, 28 October 2018,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150707083330weblink">weblink 7 July 2015, In keeping with his considerations of nonhuman animals, Singer also takes issue with the original sin reply to the problem of evil, saying that, "animals also suffer from floods, fires, and droughts, and, since they are not descended from Adam and Eve, they cannot have inherited original sin."

Medical intervention in the aging process

Singer supports the view that medical intervention into the ageing process would do more to improve human life than research on therapies for specific chronic diseases in the developed world. He stated:{{cquote|In developed countries, aging is the ultimate cause of 90 per cent of all human deaths. Thus, treating aging is a form of preventive medicine for all of the diseases of old age. Moreover, even before aging leads to our death, it reduces our capacity to enjoy our lives and to contribute positively to the lives of others. So, instead of targeting specific diseases that are much more likely to occur when people have reached a certain age, wouldn't a better strategy be to try to forestall or repair the damage done to our bodies by the aging process?NEWS, Singer, Peter, Should we live to 1,000?,weblink 4 June 2021, The Globe and Mail, December 27, 2012, 21 June 2023,weblink live, }}Singer worries that "If we discover how to slow aging, we might have a world in which the poor majority must face death at a time when members of the rich minority are only a 10th of the way through their expected lifespans", thus risking that "overcoming aging will increase the stock of injustice in the world". Singer cautiously highlights that as with other medical developments, they would reach the more economically disadvantaged over time once developed, whereas they can never do so if they are not. As to the concern that longer lives might contribute to overpopulation, Singer notes that "success in overcoming aging could itself ... delay or eliminate menopause, enabling women to have their first children much later than they can now" and thus slowing the birth rate, and also that technology may reduce the consequences of rising human populations by (for instance) enabling more zero-greenhouse gas energy sources.In 2012, Singer's department sponsored the "Science and Ethics of Eliminating Aging" seminar at Princeton.NEWS, Wang, Angela, Scholar on aging argues people can now live to 1,000,weblink 5 June 2021, The Daily Princetonian, October 4, 2012, 20 June 2023,weblink live,

Protests

File:Peter Singer no Fronteiras do Pensamento Porto Alegre (9620101528).jpg|thumb|Singer lecturing in Porto AlegrePorto AlegreIn 1989 and 1990, Singer's work was the subject of a number of protests in Germany. A course in ethics led by Hartmut Kliemt at the University of Duisburg where the main text used was Singer's Practical Ethics was, according to Singer, "subjected to organised and repeated disruption by protesters objecting to the use of the book on the grounds that in one of its ten chapters it advocates active euthanasia for severely disabled newborn infants". The protests led to the course being shut down.BOOK, Writings on an Ethical Life, Peter, Singer, On Being Silenced in Germany, 2001, 303–318, Fourth Estate, 978-1-84115-550-0, When Singer tried to speak during a lecture at Saarbrücken, he was interrupted by a group of protesters including advocates for disability rights. One of the protesters expressed that entering serious discussions would be a tactical error.Holger Dorf, "Singer in Saabrücken", Unirevue (Winter Semester, 1989/90), p.47. The same year, Singer was invited to speak in Marburg at a European symposium on "Bioengineering, Ethics and Mental Disability". The invitation was fiercely attacked by leading intellectuals and organisations in the German media, with an article in Der Spiegel comparing Singer's positions to Nazism. Eventually, the symposium was cancelled and Singer's invitation withdrawn.WEB, Sheri, Berman, Sheri Berman,weblink Euthanasia, Eugenics and Fascism: How Close are the Connections, German Politics and Society 17(3), Fall 1999, 2 April 2012,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120402234446weblink">weblink 28 October 2018, A lecture at the Zoological Institute of the University of Zurich was interrupted by two groups of protesters. The first group was a group of disabled people who staged a brief protest at the beginning of the lecture. They objected to inviting an advocate of euthanasia to speak. At the end of this protest, when Singer tried to address their concerns, a second group of protesters rose and began chanting Singer raus! Singer raus! ("Singer out!" in German) When Singer attempted to respond, a protester jumped on stage and grabbed his glasses, and the host ended the lecture. Singer explains "my views are not threatening to anyone, even minimally", and says that some groups play on the anxieties of those who hear only keywords that are understandably worrying (given the constant fears of ever repeating the Holocaust) if taken with any less than the full context of his belief system.{{rp|pages=346–359}}WEB,weblink Criticanarede.com, Criticanarede.com, 31 May 2005, 28 October 2018, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20110122145916weblink">weblink 22 January 2011, In 1991, Singer was due to speak along with R. M. Hare and {{ill|Georg Meggle|de}} at the 15th International Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg am Wechsel, Austria. Singer has stated that threats were made to Adolf Hübner, then the president of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society, that the conference would be disrupted if Singer and Meggle were given a platform. Hübner proposed to the board of the society that Singer's invitation, as well as the invitations of a number of other speakers, be withdrawn. The Society decided to cancel the symposium.In an article originally published in The New York Review of Books, Singer argued that the protests dramatically increased the amount of coverage he received, saying that "instead of a few hundred people hearing views at lectures in Marburg and Dortmund, several millions read about them or listened to them on television". Despite this, Singer argues that it has led to a difficult intellectual climate, with professors in Germany unable to teach courses on applied ethics and campaigns demanding the resignation of professors who invited Singer to speak.

Criticism

Singer was criticised in 2017 for an op-ed co-written with Jeff McMahan, in which he defends Anna Stubblefield, who was convicted of aggravated sexual assault against D.J., a man with severe physical disability. Singer and McMahan argued that the judge refused to consider independent evidence that D.J. was indirectly able to communicate, and could have been interrogated. They argued that Anna Stubblefield believes her love to be reciprocal, and that D.J. still had not given sign of hostility towards Stubblefield.NEWS, McMahan, Jeff, Singer, Peter, April 3, 2017, Who Is the Victim in the Anna Stubblefield Case?,weblink Nathan J. Robinson, founder of Current Affairs, criticised when Singer and McMahan wrote that even supposing that D.J. is not just physically but also cognitively impaired (which they contest), then D.J. may not even understand the concept of consent, and it "seems reasonable to assume that the experience was pleasurable to him", as "he was capable of struggling to resist." Robinson called this a "rape", and considers that Singer and McMahan's argument implies that it would be permissible to rape or sexually assault sufficiently disabled people as long as they do not try to resist.NEWS, Robinson, Nathan J., 4 April 2017, Now Peter Singer argues that it might be okay to rape disabled people,weblink live,weblink 10 September 2023, 21 April 2019, Current Affairs, Roger Scruton was critical of the consequentialist, utilitarian approach of Singer.BOOK, Scruton, Roger, Roger Scruton, On Human Nature, Princeton University Press, Princeton and Oxford, 2017, 91, 978-0-691-18303-9, Scruton alleged that Singer's works, including Animal Liberation (1975), "contain little or no philosophical argument. They derive their radical moral conclusions from a vacuous utilitarianism that counts the pain and pleasure of all living things as equally significant and that ignores just about everything that has been said in our philosophical tradition about the real distinction between persons and animals." Anthropologists have criticised Singer's foundational essay "Animal Liberation", published in 1973,MAGAZINE, Singer, Peter, 5 April 1973, Animal Liberation,weblink The New York Review, 18 April 2021, 18 April 2021,weblink live, for comparing the interests of "slum children" with the interests of the rats that bite them – at a time when poor and predominantly Black American children were regularly attacked and bitten by rats, sometimes fatally.WEB, Cherkaev, Xenia, Zoo-Fascism, Russia: To Hell with Equality and Ownerless Dogs,weblink 2021-04-18, Society for Cultural Anthropology, 15 April 2021, en, 22 June 2023,weblink live,

Recognition

Singer was elected a corresponding fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 1981.WEB, Fellow Profile: Peter Singer,weblink 2024-04-22, Australian Academy of the Humanities, en-AU, He was inducted into the United States Animal Rights Hall of Fame in 2000.WEB,weblink U.S. Animal Rights Hall of Fame, Animal Rights National Conference, 28 October 2018,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160206180318weblink">weblink 6 February 2016, dead, In June 2012, Singer was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) for "eminent service to philosophy and bioethics as a leader of public debate and communicator of ideas in the areas of global poverty, animal welfare and the human condition".WEB, Companion (AC) in the General Division of the Order of Australia – The Queen's Birthday 2012 Honours Lists,weblink Official Secretary to the Governor-General of Australia, 8, 16 June 2012, 28 October 2018, 3 April 2019,weblink live, Singer received Philosophy Now{{'}}s 2016 Award for Contributions in the Fight Against Stupidity for his efforts "to disturb the comfortable complacency with which many of us habitually ignore the desperate needs of others ... particularly for this work as it relates to the Effective Altruism movement".WEB,weblink The Philosophy Now Award for Contributions in the Fight Against Stupidity, Philosophy Now, 28 October 2018, 22 March 2019,weblink live, In 2018, Singer was cited in the book Rescuing Ladybugs by author and animal advocate Jennifer Skiff as a "hero among heroes in the world" who, in arguing against speciesism "gave the modern world permission to believe what we innately know – that animals are sentient and that we have a moral obligation not to exploit or mistreat them."BOOK, Skiff, Jennifer, Rescuing Ladybugs: Inspirational Encounters with Animals That Changed the World, 2018, New World Library, Novato, California, 978-1-60868-503-5, 132–133, {{rp|132}} The book states that Singer's "moral philosophy on animal equality was sparked when he asked a fellow student at Oxford University a simple question about his eating habits."In 2021, Singer was awarded the US$1-million Berggruen Prize,NEWS, Schuessler, Jennifer, 2021-09-07, Peter Singer Wins $1 Million Berggruen Prize, en-US, The New York Times,weblink 2021-09-07, 0362-4331, 11 August 2023,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20230811082251weblink">weblink live, and decided to give it away. He decided in particular to give half of the prize money to his foundation The Life You Can Save, because "over the last three years, each dollar spent by it generated an average of $17 in donations for its recommended nonprofits". He added he has never taken money for personal use from the organisation. Moreover, he plans to donate more than a third of the money to organisations combating intensive animal farming, and recommended as effective by Animal Charity Evaluators.WEB, Singer, Peter,weblink How to give away a million dollars, Project Syndicate, 7 September 2021, 16 September 2021, 12 September 2022,weblink live, For 2022, Singer received the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award in the category of "Humanities and Social Sciences".WEB,weblink BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award 2022, 9 March 2023, 21 September 2021,weblink live,

Personal life

Since 1968, Singer has been married to Renata Singer (née Diamond; born in 1947 in Wałbrzych, Poland). They have three children: Ruth, a textile artist; Marion, a law student and youth arts specialist; and Esther, a linguist and teacher. Singer's wife is a novelist and author, and has collaborated on publications with her husband.WEB, Jeffries, Stuart,weblink Moral maze, The Guardian, 22 July 2005, 28 October 2018, 19 September 2014,weblink live, Until 2021, she was president of the Kadimah Jewish Cultural Centre and National Library in Melbourne.WEB, Renata Singer,weblink 2021-12-04, Kadimah Jewish Cultural Centre and National Library, en-AU, 14 March 2019,weblink live,

Publications

Singly authored books

  • Democracy and Disobedience, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1973; Oxford University Press, New York, 1974; Gregg Revivals, Aldershot, Hampshire, 1994
  • Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for our Treatment of Animals, New York Review/Random House, New York, 1975; Cape, London, 1976; Avon, New York, 1977; Paladin, London, 1977; Thorsons, London, 1983. Harper Perennial Modern Classics, New York, 2002. Harper Perennial Modern Classics, New York, 2009.
  • Practical Ethics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1980; second edition, 1993; third edition, 2011. {{ISBN|0-521-22920-0}}, {{ISBN|0-521-29720-6}}, {{ISBN|978-0-521-70768-8}}
  • Marx, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1980; Hill & Wang, New York, 1980; reissued as Marx: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2000; also included in full in K. Thomas (ed.), Great Political Thinkers: Machiavelli, Hobbes, Mill and Marx, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1992
  • (The Expanding Circle|The Expanding Circle: Ethics and Sociobiology), Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 1981; Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1981; New American Library, New York, 1982. {{ISBN|0-19-283038-4}}
  • Hegel, Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1982; reissued as Hegel: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2001; also included in full in German Philosophers: Kant, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1997
  • How Are We to Live? Ethics in an Age of Self-interest, Text Publishing, Melbourne, 1993; Mandarin, London, 1995; Prometheus, Buffalo, NY, 1995; Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1997
  • Rethinking Life and Death: The Collapse of Our Traditional Ethics, Text Publishing, Melbourne, 1994; St Martin's Press, New York, 1995; reprint 2008. {{ISBN|0-312-11880-5}} Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1995
  • Ethics into Action: Henry Spira and the Animal Rights Movement, Rowman and Littlefield, Lanham, Maryland, 1998; Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 1999
  • A Darwinian Left, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London, 1999; Yale University Press, New Haven, 2000. {{ISBN|0-300-08323-8}}
  • (One World: The Ethics of Globalisation), Yale University Press, New Haven, 2002; Text Publishing, Melbourne, 2002; 2nd edition, pb, Yale University Press, 2004; Oxford Longman, Hyderabad, 2004. {{ISBN|0-300-09686-0}}
  • Pushing Time Away: My Grandfather and the Tragedy of Jewish Vienna, Ecco Press, New York, 2003; HarperCollins Australia, Melbourne, 2003; Granta, London, 2004
  • The President of Good and Evil: The Ethics of George W. Bush, Dutton, New York, 2004; Granta, London, 2004; Text, Melbourne, 2004. {{ISBN|0-525-94813-9}}
  • (The Life You Can Save|The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty). New York: Random House 2009.Reviewed at NEWS, Dwight, Garner, If You Think You're Good, You Should Think Again,weblink The New York Times, 10 March 2009, 28 October 2018, 9 November 2020,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20201109032416weblink">weblink live,
  • The Most Good You Can Do: How Effective Altruism Is Changing Ideas About Living Ethically. Yale University Press, 2015.JOURNAL, Camosy, Charles, Book Reviews: Peter Singer, The Most Good You Can Do: How Effective Altruism is Changing Ideas About Living Ethically and Peter Singer, Ethics in the Real World: 82 Brief Essays on Things That Matter, Studies in Christian Ethics, 2018, 31, 3, 370–373, 10.1177/0953946818769552u, 149797021,weblink 28 October 2018, subscription, 29 July 2018,weblink live,
  • Ethics in the Real World: 82 Brief Essays on Things That Matter. Princeton University Press, 2016.
  • Why Vegan? Eating Ethically. Liveright, 2020.

Coauthored books

  • Animal Factories (co-author with James Mason), Crown, New York, 1980
  • The Reproduction Revolution: New Ways of Making Babies (co-author with Deane Wells), Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1984. revised American edition, Making Babies, Scribner's New York, 1986
  • Animal Liberation: A Graphic Guide (co-author with Lori Gruen), Camden Press, London, 1987
  • Should the Baby Live? The Problem of Handicapped Infants (co-author with Helga Kuhse), Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1985; Oxford University Press, New York, 1986; Gregg Revivals, Aldershot, Hampshire, 1994. {{ISBN|0-19-217745-1}}
  • Ethical and Legal Issues in Guardianship Options for Intellectually Disadvantaged People (co-author with Terry Carney), Human Rights Commission Monograph Series, no. 2, Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra, 1986
  • How Ethical Is Australia? An Examination of Australia's Record as a Global Citizen (with Tom Gregg), Black Inc, Melbourne, 2004
  • The Ethics of What We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter (or The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter), Rodale, New York, 2006 (co-author with Jim Mason); Text, Melbourne; Random House, London. Audio version: Playaway. {{ISBN|1-57954-889-X}}
  • Eating (co-authored with Jim Mason), Arrow, London, 2006
  • Stem Cell Research: the ethical issues. (co-edited by Lori Gruen, Laura Grabel, and Peter Singer). New York: Blackwells. 2007.
  • The Future of Animal Farming: Renewing the Ancient Contract (with Marian Stamp Dawkins, and Roland Bonney) 2008. New York: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • The Point of View of the Universe: Sidgwick and Contemporary Ethics (with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek), Oxford University Press, 2014
  • Utilitarianism: A Very Short Introduction (with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek), Oxford University Press, 2017
  • The Buddhist and the Ethicist: Conversations on Effective Altruism, Engaged Buddhism, and How to Build a Better World (with Shih Chao-Hwei), Shambhala Publications, 2023

Edited and coedited volumes and anthologies

  • Test-Tube Babies: a guide to moral questions, present techniques, and future possibilities (co-edited with William Walters), Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1982
  • Animal Rights and Human Obligations: An Anthology (co-editor with Tom Regan), Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, 1976. 2nd revised edition, Prentice-Hall, New Jersey, 1989
  • In Defence of Animals (ed.), Blackwells, Oxford, 1985; Harper & Row, New York, 1986. {{ISBN|0-631-13897-8}}
  • Applied Ethics (ed.), Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1986
  • Embryo Experimentation (co-editor with Helga Kuhse, Stephen Buckle, Karen Dawson and Pascal Kasimba), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990; paperback edition, updated, 1993
  • A Companion to Ethics (ed.), Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1991; paperback edition, 1993
  • Save the Animals! (Australian edition, co-author with Barbara Dover and Ingrid Newkirk), Collins Angus & Robertson, North Ryde, NSW, 1991
  • The Great Ape Project: Equality Beyond Humanity (co-editor with Paola Cavalieri), Fourth Estate, London, 1993; hardback, St Martin's Press, New York, 1994; paperback, St Martin's Press, New York, 1995
  • Ethics (ed.), Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1994
  • Individuals, Humans and Persons: Questions of Life and Death (co-author with Helga Kuhse), Academia Verlag, Sankt Augustin, Germany, 1994
  • The Greens (co-author with Bob Brown), Text Publishing, Melbourne, 1996
  • The Allocation of Health Care Resources: An Ethical Evaluation of the "QALY" Approach (co-author with John McKie, Jeff Richardson and Helga Kuhse), Ashgate/Dartmouth, Aldershot, 1998
  • A Companion to Bioethics (co-editor with Helga Kuhse), Blackwell, Oxford, 1998
  • Bioethics. An Anthology (co-editor with Helga Kuhse), Blackwell, 1999/ Oxford, 2006
  • The Moral of the Story: An Anthology of Ethics Through Literature (co-edited with Renata Singer), Blackwell, Oxford, 2005
  • In Defense of Animals. The Second Wave (ed.), Blackwell, Oxford, 2005
  • The Bioethics Reader: Editors' Choice. (co-editor with Ruth Chadwick, Helga Kuhse, Willem Landman and Udo Schüklenk). New York: Blackwell, 2007
  • J. M. Coetzee and Ethics: Philosophical Perspectives on Literature (co-editor with A. Leist), New York: Columbia University Press, 2010
  • The Golden Ass, by Apuleius (edited and abridged by Peter Singer, translated by Ellen D. Finkelpearl), New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation; London: W.W. Norton and Company, Ltd., 2021

Anthologies of Singer's work

  • Writings on an Ethical Life, Ecco, New York, 2000; Fourth Estate, London, 2001. {{ISBN|0-06-019838-9}}
  • Unsanctifying Human Life: Essays on Ethics (edited by Helga Kuhse), Blackwell, Oxford, 2001

Commentary volumes on Singer's work

  • Jamieson, Dale (ed.). Singer and His Critics. Wiley-Blackwell, 1999
  • Schaler, Jeffrey A. (ed.). Peter Singer Under Fire: The Moral Iconoclast Faces His Critics. Chicago: Open Court Publishers, 2009
  • Davidow, Ben (ed.). "Peter Singer" Uncaged: Top Activists Share Their Wisdom on Effective Farm Animal Advocacy. Davidow Press, 2013

See also

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist}}

External links

{{Commons category}}
  • {{Official website}}
  • Column archive at Project Syndicate
  • {{C-SPAN|84300}}
{{Effective altruism}}{{Analytic philosophy}}{{Ethics}}{{Animal rights|advocates}}{{Vegetarianism}}{{Wild animal suffering}}{{Authority control}}

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