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University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > 80,000 Hours: Cambridge > The most good you can do: Q&A with Peter Singer
The most good you can do: Q&A with Peter SingerAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Natalia Molina. If you’re lucky enough to live without want, it’s a natural impulse to be altruistic to others. But, asks philosopher Peter Singer, what’s the most effective way to give? In his Ted Talk, he talks through some surprising thought experiments to help you balance emotion and practicality — and make the biggest impact with whatever you can share. We’ll start by showing his TED video (10 minutes), then open to Q&A for 50 minutes. Peter Singer may be, as The New Yorker calls him, the planet’s “most influential living philosopher.” The Australian academic specializes in applied ethics, to which he takes a secular, utilitarian approach—minimize suffering, maximize well-being. He gained recognition in the 1970s with his groundbreaking book Animal Liberation: A New Ethics for Our Treatment of Animals, which questions society’s tendency to put human needs above those of members of other species. And he draws fire from critics who object to his fascinating argument in favor of an obligation to help the global poor that sets the bar so high that it means we are almost all living unethically. His defense of euthanasia and infanticide, in some circumstances, has led to protests against his lectures and to teaching position at Princeton. But Singer’s collective body of work is more acclaimed than controversial. He has written the classic text Practical Ethics and many other books, with more in progress. He lectures at Princeton, where he is professor of bioethics, and the University of Melbourne, where he is a laureate professor. You can find dozens of brief, brilliant essays at Project Syndicate, where Singer examines the philosophical questions surrounding current topics like Obamacare, computer piracy and obesity. What others say “Singer’s work is challenging, not because his writing is difficult to understand but because it is all too clear. He … has a knack for pushing people out of their moral comfort zone.” — Scientific American, 10/22/12 This talk is part of the 80,000 Hours: Cambridge series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
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