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Book Review
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Volume 333:1509 November 30, 1995 Number 22
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Rethinking Life and Death: The collapse of our traditional ethics

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By Peter Singer. 256 pp. New York, St. Martin's Press, 1994. $22.95. ISBN 0-312-118-805.

Philosophers, notoriously, are an ivory-towered lot. One philosopher who has never fit that mold is the Australian Peter Singer. Indeed, he has probably had a larger popular readership than any professional philosopher since Bertrand Russell, and more success in effecting changes in acceptable behavior. Interestingly, Singer is an adherent of a moral theory similar to Russell's, the very modern, Western, democratic (and some would say very British) theory of Utilitarianism. Utilitarian moral theory is the philosophical equivalent of outcomes research in medicine; it posits that it is the consequences that count, and that success (or failure) is the major determinant . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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