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| | Peter Singer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Singer's positions have been attacked by many different groups concerned with what they see as an attack upon human dignity, from advocates for disabled people to religious groups, including right-to-life supporters. |  | | Consistent with his general ethical theory, Singer holds that the right to physical integrity is grounded in a being's ability to suffer, and the right to life is grounded in, among other things, the ability to plan and anticipate one's future. |  | | (Singer's own life demonstrates this, as he acknowledges.) The question is whether the tension between objective and subjective viewpoints provides a source of mere excuses for murder, or whether instead the subjective point of view draws on sources of importance that have to be balanced against the objective point of view. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Singer
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| | michael specter--title |
 | | Singer's thought is shaped by the assumption that the results of your behavior should agree with the preferences of anyone whom your behavior would affect. |  | | Singer has spent his career trying to lay down rules for human behavior which are divorced from emotion and intuition. |  | | Peter Singer may be the most controversial philosopher alive; he is certainly among the most influential. |
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http://www.michaelspecter.com/ny/1999/1999_09_06_philosopher.html
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| | Singer: Ethics in the Age of Evolutionary Psychology |
 | | Given Singer's willingness to challenge established views, I was a little surprised that he still talks in terms of the left and right, particularly as it seems his conception of the left is a long way from any traditional view. |  | | "Peter Singer is the most effective philosopher alive." It would be hard to argue with Brian Appleyard's assessment of the man who has been the intellectual driving force behind the animal rights movement, and whose views on euthanasia, though often greeted with hostility, have stimulated an enormous amount of public debate. |  | | Singer believes Darwinian theory gives us an understanding of the origin of ethics, because, for example, it gives an evolutionary explanation of how reciprocity came to be. |
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http://cogweb.ucla.edu/Debate/SingerPM.html
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| | NAIA: Dissecting Peter Singer: |
 | | Singer's utilitarian philosophy depends upon the demonstration that insufficient good has come from animal research to justify the pain and suffering it has caused. |  | | As they note, Singer is held up as a model standard-bearer of the movement, one who has provided intellectual rigor to replace emotionalism and sentimentality. |  | | Indeed, the acknowledged founder and chief guru of the movement, Australian philosopher Peter Singer, played a major role in unleashing the virulent attack on researchers with his descriptions of their work in the chapter "Tools for Research" in Animal Liberation. |
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http://www.naiaonline.org/body/articles/archives/disectps.htm
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| | WORLD Magazine Weekly News, Christian Views |
 | | Singer's effectiveness in teaching "Practical Ethics" to Princeton undergraduates is that he does not come across personally as beastly. |  | | Singer argues that any kind of "fully consensual" sexual behavior involving two people or 200 is ethically fine. |  | | Singer says, and he was more influenced by reading Bertrand Russell's The History of Western Philosophy. |
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http://www.worldmag.com/subscriber/displayarticle.cfm?id=9987
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| | Guardian Unlimited Archive Search |
 | | Singer is a philosopher, not a medical doctor, but there is little critical examination of the term "disabled" in his work. |  | | We are, in Singer's view, simply being "speciesist" when we drip detergent on to a rabbit's eye rather than carrying out the same procedure on a human patient in a persistent-vegetative state. |  | | For George, Singer's rejection of the notion of rights and the moral inviolability of individual humans leads not towards intellectual clarification but towards a moral morass. |
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,3926371,00.html
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| | The false philosophy of Peter Singer by Jenny Teichman |
 | | Singer, though, is not interested in any logical howlers to be found in Lockes thought, but rather in what he sees as that philosophers impeccable authority: This sense [of the word person] has impeccable philosophical antecedents. |  | | Singer denies that human beings as such have any intrinsic value, hence he is a non- or anti-humanist. |  | | Singer does not address himself directly to these questions, but his stated principles appear to imply that those who lack a right to life include inarticulate human children, and even articulate children (or adults) whose understanding of what constitutes a person differs from Singers own. |
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http://www.newcriterion.com/archive/11/apr93/jenny.htm
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| | One World - Peter Singer |
 | | Singer correctly argues that that's hardly an ethical point of view, but it also is human nature. |  | | Singer concludes that "we should be developing the ethical foundations of the coming era of a single world community" -- an admirable if not necessarily realistic ideal (given how poorly we manage this in even our most limited and local communities). |  | | In a global community Singer sees some international humanitarian intervention as desirable -- though firmly believing: "Only the United Nations should attempt to take on this responsibility to protect." Singer makes a good case for why intervention is, under certain circumstances, acceptable and even desirable -- indeed, even a duty, in some circumstances. |
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http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/divphil/singerp1.htm
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| | Who is Peter Singer? |
 | | Singer, could be the most dangerous man in the world, because he is the stupid and misguided fool leading a vicious and mindless assault on human rights and the idea of freedom itself. |  | | The vast majority of the intellectual elite who hold ideas similar to Singer's would quickly change their minds, and Singer would be only of interest to philosophers and students of philosophy. |  | | He has said that some animals have had a greater right to exist than many human beings and in a work called Practical Ethics claimed that retarded, deformed and ill babies should be put to death because they are a burden on the human race. |
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http://www.mofed.org/Who%20is%20Peter%20Singer.htm
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| | Reason magazine -- December 2000, The Pursuit of Happiness, Peter Singer interviewed by Ronald Bailey |
 | | Singer is perhaps the most thoroughgoing philosophical utilitarian since Jeremy Bentham. |  | | Indeed, his language regarding the treatment of disabled human beings is at times appallingly similar to the eugenic arguments used by Nazi theorists concerning "life unworthy of life." Singer, however, believes that only parents, not the state, should have the power to make decisions about the fates of disabled infants. |  | | Singer: I think understanding Darwinian thinking makes us realize that humans are not by nature egalitarian. |
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http://reason.com/0012/rb.the.shtml
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| | Nat Hentoff |
 | | Singer does not focus only on preventing disabled infants from being miserable. |  | | Singer has been influenced by Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832), the founder of modern utilitarianism. |  | | He held that the foundation of morals and legislation should be, as Singer explains him, "to maximize pleasure or happiness and minimize pain or unhappiness." Once killed, the disabled infant will be freed of pain. |
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http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/hentoff091399.asp
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| | Amazon.com: Practical Ethics: Books: Peter Singer |
 | | Peter Singer's remarkably clear and comprehensive Practical Ethics has become a classic introduction to applied ethics since its publication in 1979 and has been translated into many languages. |  | | Singer uses detailed scientific facts as well as moral argument to explore how we should behave, and comes to many controversial conclusions. |  | | It is an amazing book, because it quietly, calmly and rationally tears apart most of our conventional views about what is right and wrong, particularly in the areas of abortion, euthanasia, our treatment of animals, how we should respond to global poverty and what responsibility we have towards future generations. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/052143971X?v=glance
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| | The National Interest - 13/05/01: Biodiversity; Peter Singer |
 | | Peter Singer: Well the sentence doesn’t say that I make no distinction, it says that there’s differences of degree, but not of kind, that in a sense we’re on a continuum. |  | | It may involve you in some work for the university, part-time work of various sorts as well, which they say means that even a person who comes from a home without any money at all should be able to take up the place. |  | | Of course there are other colleagues and people in the Philosophy Department who really are doing questions about ethics that don’t have substantive impact on major issues, so not everyone feels the need to do that, but there’s an acceptance that it’s part of what goes on here. |
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http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/natint/stories/s295489.htm
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| | Peter Singer responds |
 | | Singer speaks of making the world a better place he has something more objective in mind. |  | | The notion of making the world a "better" place is one with which few will disagree but the concept of "better" assumes some fixed point of reference which is problematic for an atheistic picture of things. |  | | Jesus is for those who are aware that their hearts don't work and need repair so that they can love selflessly and joyfully. |
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http://www.worldmagblog.com/blog/archives/017392.html
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| | Peter Singer |
 | | The disintegration of the Left as a coherent body of thought has obscured the fact that in our assumptions about society and the individual, many of us are Marxists still. |  | | Maybe one day, he suggested to the LSE audience, "those more utopian dreams of the Left may be in our power", if science becomes capable of "genetically engineering a better society". |  | | Although 'philosopher' is his job title (his base is the Centre for Human Bioethics at Monash University in Victoria), Singer's success arises in large part from his skill as a publicist, in the Continental sense of a journalist who writes as an advocate of a cause. |
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http://homepage.ntlworld.com/marek.kohn/singer.html
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| | AR.net >> Wall Street Journal attacks animal rights advocate Peter Singer |
 | | Singer tries to pass off this astounding conclusion in pseudo-intellectual drivel, writing that society "would have to accept in some cases that it would be right to kill a person who does not choose to die on the grounds that the person will otherwise lead a miserable life." |  | | Hes more than happy to see human beings living "miserable lives" killed to minimize the overall level of suffering. |  | | In doing so Singer explicitly equated the suffering or happiness of non-humans such as chimpanzees with humans who are mentally impaired in some way, such as very young children or the mentally retarded. |
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http://www.animalrights.net/archives/year/1998/000062.html
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| | Animal Ethics Clarifier: an encyclopedia of animal ethics - S Entries |
 | | Singer believes that our treatment of animals is one of the major ethical issues today. |  | | Moral theory which holds that each moral situation is different and should be considered against its unique set of circumstances. |  | | The term speciesism was coined in the 1970's by the British psychologist and ethicist Richard D Ryder, applied in his book Victims of Science (1975), and further popularised by Peter Singer in his book Animal Liberation (1975). |
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http://www.wolftrust.org.uk/aec-s-entries.html
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| | Peter Singer |
 | | Facts, Theories, and Hard Choices: Reply to Peter Singer. |  | | · Facts, Theories, and Hard Choices: Reply to Peter Singer. |  | | · Singer Back, with New Food for Thought. |
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http://www.utilitarian.net/singer
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| | Philosophical Dictionary: Sidgwick-Smith |
 | | Expanding on the behaviorist theories of Watson, Skinner engaged in strict scientific study of human behavior and proposed the application of psychology to the deliberate engineering of human societies. |  | | A statement that some individual has a particular feature. |  | | , Singer argues for the moral relevance of animal pain. |
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http://www.philosophypages.com/dy/s5.htm
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| | ETHICS - The drowning child... |
 | | Peter Singer indicates how this may change our lives. |  | | To challenge my students to think about the ethics of what we owe to people in need, I ask them to imagine that their route to the university takes them past a shallow pond. |
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http://www.newint.org/issue289/drowning.htm
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| | Interview with Peter Singer |
 | | Let's keep our focus here and not get distracted. |  | | Where does this debate shift at that point? |  | | SINGER: The logic's not wrong, it's the timing that's wrong. |
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http://www.brook.edu/views/interviews/fellows/singer_20020830.htm
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| | nthposition online magazine: A conversation with Peter Singer |
 | | Peter Singer has been called the most controversial philosopher in the world (this may be because he's the only philosopher most journalists have heard of). |  | | His books cover a wide range of ethical issues, from animal liberation to euthanasia, and from globalisation to the workings of George Bush's mind. |  | | Click here to find out more about the site. |
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http://www.nthposition.com/aconversationwithpeter.php
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| | A Darwinian Left - Peter Singer |
 | | If we shrug our shoulders at the avoidable suffering of the weak and the poor, of those who are getting exploited and ripped off, or who simply do not have enough to sustain life at a decent level, we are not of the left. |  | | Singer addresses this to some extent, but his pseudo-definition (or rather: anti-definition) is less than helpful: |  | | Because of the brevity of this book one can forgive many of the simplifications and the lack of a more rigorous analysis. |
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http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/darwinc/datlse1.htm
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| | Peter Singer |
 | | Media reports have isolated this thread from the whole cloth of Singers ethical philosophy. |  | | Peter Singer helped to found the modern "animal rights" (AR) movement with his 1975 book Animal Liberation, in which he argued that our willful ignorance of the pain and suffering of non-human animals is a moral error analogous to racism and sexism. |  | | Im not going to change my tune just because people distort it; Im just going to keep trying to get the message across, get people to hear it in the way it was intended. |
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http://www.citypaper.net/articles/100799/feat.20q.shtml
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| | Princeton - PWB 120798 - The Appointment of Professor Peter Singer |
 | | Appointments like these give us an opportunity to discuss fundamental issues about a university's central purposes and core values. |  | | In these ways we challenge students -- and others -- to think critically, to examine their beliefs and assumptions, to hone their abilities to identify and assess ethical issues of various kinds, and to develop both a capacity for independent thought and a set of moral values to guide them through their lives. |  | | Even careful readers of his works will disagree, sometimes quite vehemently, with what he has to say or will reject some of the premises upon which he bases his arguments. |
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http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pwb/98/1207/singer.htm
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| | TCS Daily - Beyond Peter Singer |
 | | Occasionally it pretends to be a critique of George W. Bushs ethical philosophy, as expressed in his speeches, his appointments, the magazines he probably reads, the thoughts he may sometimes think, and the fevered whispers of his guru, Melvin Olasky (who may be Marvin Olasky, as misidentified by one of Singers lazier research interns). |  | | If you share Peter Singers core beliefs atheism, statism, rationalism, and a well-cultivated indifference to the value of human life as such you will find this book to be wise, fair, and true. |  | | His book is just a shadow in darkness; just empty movement, bearing no light. |
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http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=041904C
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| | The New York Review of Books: Animal Liberation at 30 |
 | | 196–198, and "On Speciesism and Racism: Reply to Singer and Ryder," Psychologist, Vol. |  | | Peter Carruthers, The Animals Issue: Moral Theory in Practice (Cambridge University Press, 1992). |  | | In short, the outcome so far indicates that as a species we are capable of altruistic concern for other beings; but imperfect information, powerful interests, and a desire not to know disturbing facts have limited the gains made by the animal movement. |
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http://www.nybooks.com/articles/16276
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| | Peter Singer |
 | | Refuting Peter Singer's Ethical Theory : The Importance of Human Dignity |  | | Please return again soon, or email us if you would like to be notified when this entry is complete. |  | | Hegel : A Very Short Introduction by Peter Singer |
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http://www.whitehat.com.au/Australia/People/Singer.asp
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| | Students Protest Princeton Professor Who Advocates Infanticide |
 | | Singer "lacks knowledge and sensitivity about the commonality of human vulnerability and fragility," she said. |  | | In his books, Singer has said that children less than one month old have no human consciousness and do not have the same rights as others. |  | | Singer has been well known in the United States for years as an animal rights advocate. |
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http://www.euthanasia.com/prince.html
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| | NR Comment on NRO |
 | | In his latest belch, Singer reinforces his basic theory the idea that humans ain't nothing special. |  | | Some objected to President Clinton's choice of place and partner, and others thought he should have been more honest about what he had done, but no one dared suggest that he was unfit to be President simply because he had taken part in a sexual activity that was, in many jurisdictions, a crime. |  | | Not so long ago, any form of sexuality not leading to the conception of children was seen as, at best, wanton lust, or worse, a perversion. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/nr_comment/nr_comment030501a.shtml
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| | G-File on NRO |
 | | Singer's views can be described as "hyper-utilitarian." But jargon-leery laymen could use the more conventional term, "evil." He advocates infanticide for unneeded babies, euthanasia for unwanted old folks and of course last-minute abortions on demand. |  | | Singer goes on to demystify or rather, to attempt to demystify those crazy superstitions that, literally, let sleeping dogs lie. |  | | Second, for all the talk about the pernicious influence of religion in America, there's no conservative or right-winger at any major university who is a fraction as extreme as Singer, and yet if there were few schools would cloak them in the cocoon of academic freedom. |
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http://www.nationalreview.com/goldberg/goldberg031401.shtml
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| | "Peter Singer's Solution to World Poverty," New York Times Sunday Magazine |
 | | Many readers of his book "Animal Liberation" were moved to embrace vegetarianism, while others recoiled at Singer's attempt to place humans and animals on an even moral plane. |  | | The Australian philosopher Peter Singer, who later this month begins teaching at Princeton University, is perhaps the world's most controversial ethicist. |  | | When Bob first grasped the dilemma that faced him as he stood by that railway switch, he must have thought how extraordinarily unlucky he was to be placed in a situation in which he must choose between the life of an innocent child and the sacrifice of most of his savings. |
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http://people.brandeis.edu/~teuber/singermag.html
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| | Technorati Tag: peter singer |
 | | Singer: In Defense Of Animals: The Second Wav... |  | | A tag is like a subject or category. |  | | Separate tags with "OR" to search multiple subjects. |
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http://technorati.com/tag/peter+singer
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| | Animal Liberation Action Group - Homepage |
 | | Peter Singer, philosopher, author and the world's foremost Animal Liberationist, articulates the philosophy and goals of the Animal Liberation movement. |  | | Peter Singer first became well-known internationally as a result of his book Animal Liberation, sometimes described as "the Bible of Animal Liberation movement." His other books include: Democracy and Disobedience, Practical Ethics, The Expanding Circle, Marx, Hegel, Animal Factories (with Jim Mason), The Reproduction Revolution (with Deane Wells), Should the Baby Live? |  | | This program is sponsored by the Animal Liberation Action Group. |
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http://www.uwosh.edu/home_pages/organizations/alag
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| | Cato Unbound » Peter Singer |
 | | Peter Singer was the founding President of the International Association of Bioethics, and with Helga Kuhse, founding co-editor of the journal Bioethics. |  | | Two collections of his writings have been published: Writings on an Ethical Life, which he edited, and Unsanctifying Human Life, edited by Helga Kuhse. |  | | Peter Singer is Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics in the University Center for Human Values at Princeton University and Laureate Professor, University of Melbourne, Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics. |
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http://www.cato-unbound.org/contributors/peter-singer
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| | Under The Sun: Peter Singer |
 | | I would be willing to kill him in a humane way, or at least a not terribly tortuous way. |  | | And even if it is killing a person, technically, might it still be justified on utilitarian grounds? |  | | In this charming discussion, he allows as how killing a newborn baby is not killing a person. |
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http://www.bundy223.net/~andyb/blog/archives/000407.html
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| | Controversial philosopher questions PM's ethics - National - www.theage.com.au |
 | | Professor Singer believes genetic technology will have a profound impact on society in the years to come, particularly the genetic testing of embryos, which is now done to avoid devastating disease. |  | | Its global stance has been one, quite explicitly, of advancing Australia's national interests, not of taking an ethical approach to the world," he said. |  | | Professor Singer is in Australia for five weeks to visit family and present a series of talks. |
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http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/07/14/1089694423828.html?oneclick=true
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| | NPR : Peter Singer: 'Children at War' |
 | | Fresh Air from WHYY, January 12, 2005 · Peter Singer is a security analyst at The Brookings Institution. |  | | In his new book, Children at War, he takes a look at the use of children as soldiers -- which happens much more than many of us would like to think. |  | | Peter Singer is the Olin Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies Program at the Brookings Institution, and serves as the coordinator of the Brookings Project on U.S. Policy toward the Islamic World. |
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http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4280681
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| | Joint Centre for Bioethics |
 | | His current research focus is global health, in particular harnessing genomics and nanotechnology to improve health in developing countries. |  | | Dr. Peter A. Singer is Sun Life Financial Chair in Bioethics and Director of the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics and Professor of Medicine at the University of Toronto and University Health Network. |  | | He also directs the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Bioethics and the Canadian Program on Genomics and Global Health at the University of Toronto. |
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http://www.utoronto.ca/jcb/about/singer.htm
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| | MSN Encarta - Peter Singer |
 | | Singer, Peter, born in 1946, Australian philosopher and bioethicist. |  | | Born in Melbourne, Australia, Singer studied at the University of Melbourne and at... |  | | Become a subscriber today and gain access to: |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761582224/Peter_Singer.html
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| | International Vegetarian Union - Professor Peter Singer (1946- ) |
 | | The way in which we answer this question depends on the way in which each one of us, individually, answers it. |  | | He was formerly Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Human Bioethics at Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. |  | | For more books by Peter Singer go to: |
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http://www.ivu.org/people/writers/psinger.html
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| | Statement on the Hiring of Peter Singer |
 | | He has special interests in animal rights and social philosophy. |  | | Coeditor of Bioethics since 1985, Singer has published many articles and more than two dozen books, including Democracy and Disobedience (1973, 1994), Animal Liberation (1975, 1991 published in nine languages), Practical Ethics (1979), The Reproduction Revolution, Should the Baby Live? |  | | The difficulty with Princeton University's hiring of Peter Singer is that Dr. Singer’s views promote the killing of certain disabled newborns up to 28 days after birth. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Agora/2900/psai.html
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| | The New York Review of Books: Peter Singer |
 | | "Singer's documentation is unrhetorical and unemotional, his arguments tight and formidable, for he bases his case on neither personal nor religious nor highly abstract philosophical principles, but on moral positions most of us already accept." (The New York Times Book Review) |  | | Peter Singer is Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics in the University Center for Human Values at Princeton University. |  | | Radical Paradoxes: Dilemmas of the American Left, 1945-1970 by Peter Clecak |
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http://www.nybooks.com/authors/1304
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| | Project Syndicate |
 | | Bradford DeLong, Kenneth Rogoff, Peter Singer, Dominique Moisi Global Perspectives: The Frontiers of Growth, The Human Rights Revolution, Worldly Philosophers, Islam and the World International Insight: European Economies, A Window on Russia, China Stands Up, Latin America, Into Africa, The Asian Century Mind and Matter: Health and Medicine, Science and Society |  | | Peter Singer is Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University. |
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http://www.project-syndicate.org/contributor/185
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| | All Animals Are Equal, by Peter Singer |
 | | Nomos IX: Equality; the passages quoted are on p. |  | | In recent years a number of oppressed groups have campaigned vigorously for equality. |  | | In TOM REGAN & PETER SINGER (eds.), Animal Rights and Human Obligations, New Jersey, 1989, pp. |
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http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/singer02.htm
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| | Peter Singer |
 | | Discuss this person with other users on IMDb message board for Peter Singer |  | | You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers. |  | | Find where Peter Singer is credited alongside another name |
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http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1638299
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| | Peter Singer: books on Peter Singer |
 | | The Lives of Animals (University Center for Human Values Series) |  | | Coetzee Amy Gutmann (Editor) Contribution by Peter Singer Contribution by Marjorie Garber Contribution by Wendy Doniger |  | | Author: Peter H Raven George B Johnson Susan Singer Jonathan Losos |
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http://www.campusi.com/author_Peter+Singer.htm
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| | Brookings Scholar: Peter W. Singer |
 | | A Fitting End to a Terrorist (Too Bad No One Noticed) |  | | with (fba:form-id=view or fba:form-id=chat or fba:form-id=report or fba:form-id=brookingsreview) cont cont "Peter W. Singer" --> |  | | with (fba:form-id=policybrief) cont cont "Peter W. Singer" --> |
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http://www.brook.edu/scholars/fellows/psinger.htm
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