Peter Singer Giving To Charity Analysis

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Australian philosopher Peter Singer says that the world’s idea of charity and how they view giving to those less fortunate as optional is wrong. In Singer’s view 'giving to charity' is neither charitable nor generous. Singer believes that we have a duty to lessen poverty and death because we can. Singer supported his argument by saying that suffering and death caused by lack of food, shelter, or medical care are bad. If a person has it in their power to prevent something bad from happening, without sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, then they should do it because it is the right and moral thing to do.
When Singer talks about sacrifice he stresses that 'sacrifice' means to without causing anything else comparably bad to happen, or doing something that is wrong or comparable in significance to the bad thing that we can prevent. For example, if I am walking past a shallow pond and see a child drowning in it, I ought to wade in and pull the child out. This may ruin my clothes but that would be insignificant while the death of the child would be very bad. Singer believes that we can reduce avoidable …show more content…

Hardin’s lifeboat ethics are built around this idea that the world is in a sense a lifeboat. The rich people of the world are in one of the lifeboats, and the poor are in the water, drowning. Lifeboat ethics dictate that while we could be charitable to all we would all inevitably drown. Hardin says that we could be charitable to some people but that the selection process would. When harden talks about the tragedy of the commons he is referring the finite shared resources that we have as humans and how some individuals act independently and in accord with their own self-interest and against the common good of all by depleting or spoiling that

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