際際滷s for an Introduction to Philosophy course at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC, Canada. These slides talk about Singer's articles: "Famine, Affluence & Morality," and "The Singer Solution to World Poverty"
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Peter Singer on Global Poverty
1. PETER SINGER ON
AFFLUENCE &
GLOBAL POVERTY
PHIL 102, SPRING 2017
CHRISTINA HENDRICKS
UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Except images licensed otherwise, this
presentation is licensed CC BY 4.0
2. TWO WAYS SINGER ARGUES
1. Argument from a principle he thinks we will
all accept (Famine, Affluence & Morality)
2. Argument from analogy (mostly in The
Singer Solution)
If an act is morally right
in this situation
It is morally right in a
similar situation
Situation
1
Situation
2
4. OUTLINE HIS ARGUMENT IN FAMINE,
AFFLUENCE, & MORALITY
Conclusion: many people
should be doing more to
help those in need than
they are.
What is the principle he
bases his argument on?
What other premises are
there?
5. EVALUATING ARGUMENTS
Remember the steps in
evaluating arguments:
1. Are the premises true?
2. If the premises are true,
does the conclusion follow
with certainty or high
probability?
Concl.
6. EVALUATING SINGERS ARGUMENT
Discuss with one or two others & write down
on doc linked below:
1. Premises true?
2. Conclusion follows with certainty or high
probability?
3. Anything else you think should be taken
into consideration when evaluating this
argument?
https://is.gd/phil102singer
7. SINGER ON DUTY AND CHARITY
Morally
required/prohibited
What must or must not
be done
Singer: duty
Morally
permissible/optional
1.What can be done
(what is permitted)
2.Supererogatory:
praiseworthy but
optional
Singer: charity
8. IMPLICATIONS
Draw line between
morally required
(duty) and
supererogatory
(charity) differently
We should be
working full
time to relieve
great suffering
(Famine)
Image licensed CC0 from pixabay.com
9. Comfortably off people
should give 10% of income
(The Singer Solution to World
Poverty (Singer 1999))
5% for those doing quite well ($100,000 to $150,000 U.S.),
more for those with higher incomes, less for lower
(The Life You Can Save (Singer 2009))
Image licensed CC0 from pixabay.com
10. Creating bricks, Flickr photo shared by
International Disaster Volunteers, licensed CC BY
2.0
NOT ONLY MONEY!
Donate time, food, books, your knowledge & expertise
Soup kitchen in Chicago opened by Al Capone (1931), public domain
On Wikimedia Commons
11. WHAT DO YOU THINK SO FAR?
Learning Catalytics questions
13. THE CHILD IN THE POND
She Summons Ducks, Flickr photo by Peter Lindbergh, licensed CC-BY
14. THE CHILD ON THE STREET
(DORA EXAMPLE)
Dogs Get Better Treatment, Homeless Boy, Jakarta, Flickr photo shared by Danumurthi
Mahendra, licensed CC-BY
15. BOB AND HIS BUGATTI
Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Red/Black, Flickr photo shared by Axion 23, licensed CC-BY
16. EVALUATING ARGUMENTS FROM ANALOGY
1. It is morally wrong to do action X in
situation A
2. Situation A is similar in morally relevant
respects to situation B
3. If it is morally wrong to do X in A, then it is
morally wrong to do X in B
Therefore, it is morally wrong to do X in B
Are each of these premises true,
for Singers analogies?
17. ACTING ON ARGUMENTS
What is the point of relating philosophy to public
(and personal) affairs if we do not take our
conclusions seriously? In this instance, taking our
conclusion seriously means acting on it.
(Famine)
The Life You Can Save website, with a calculator
for how much you should give, a pledge to give
that much, and charities that have been
researched:
http://www.thelifeyoucansave.org/