Peter Singer on Affluence & Global Poverty
PHIL 102, Fall 2013Christina Hendricks
Peter Singer Australian, now at Princeton University
Clip from a documentary called Examined Life, giving an overview of Singer’s views on poverty and ethical treatment of animals
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVViICWs4dM
How Singer argues for poverty relief
Starts by setting out certain principles and assumptions that he thinks will be widely accepted
Then shows that what follows from these has important implications for how we live
A bit like Socrates in that respect!
The basic argumentHow does he argue for the claim that we ought to
be helping those in need more than we are?
1. “suffering and death from lack of food, shelter, and medical care are bad” (“Famine”)
2. “if it is in our power to prevent something bad from happening, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral significance, we ought, morally, to do it” (“Famine”)
Weaker version of 2: same as above, except “without sacrificing anything morally significant”
The basic argument3. It is in our power to prevent suffering and
death from lack of food, shelter, and medical care without sacrificing anything of moral significance (weak version), by donating money we would have used on morally insignificant things to help those in need
Therefore, we ought, morally, to donate money we would otherwise use on morally insignificant things to help those in need
-- this is a moral obligation, not just something it would be nice to do
The strong versionSinger thinks the strong version of premise 2 is
the correct one, which would require:
“we ought to give until we reach the level of marginal utility—that is, the level at which, by giving more, I would cause as much suffering to myself or my dependent as I would relieve by my gift” (“Famine”)
He doesn’t argue here for why the strong version is the one we ought to accept, but consider: do you value new computer, clothes over lives of children?
A moderate proposalIn his most recent book (The Life You Can Save), Singer
notes that asking people to give as much as the strong version would require may not actually produce the best outcome
—it may lead them to ignore you and do nothing, feel they can’t possibly live up to the standard and give up
Moderate versions: Comfortably off people give 10% of income (“The Singer
Solution to World Poverty”) Sliding scale: 5% for those doing quite well ($100,000 to
$150,000 U.S.), more for those with higher incomes, less for those with less (The Life You Can Save, 2009)
The analogiesIn addition to the logical argument given
at the beginning, Singer also provides several analogies
Why use both forms of argument?
Is one more effective than another, or better to have both?
The analogies
“She Summons Ducks,” Flickr photo by Peter Lindbergh, licensed CC-BY
Philosophy experiments site
Before doing the readings, I asked you to go through these questions to see how you would respond to the kinds of situations Singer asks us to think about.
http://www.philosophyexperiments.com/singer/Default.aspx
The analogies
“Dogs Get Better Treatment, Homeless Boy, JakartaFlickr photo shared by Danumurthi Mahendra, licensed CC-BY
The analogies
Bugatti Veyron Grand Sport Red/Black, Flickr photo shared by Axion 23, licensed CC-BY
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 suggested charities that have been researched:
http://www.thelifeyoucansave.org/