Singer Flashcards

1
Q

Theory

A

conceptual framework for explaining a set of facts/concepts.

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2
Q

Moral theory

A

explains the basis for right and wrong.

- Good theories offer a system that covers all morality.

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3
Q

The greatest happiness principle (GHP):

A

An action is morally right if doing it produces more overall happiness for all concerned than not doing it, or doing some alternative action.

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4
Q

Utilitarianism

A
  • Happiness=pleasure, absence of pain
  • Consequences are what we consider when judging the morality of actions.
  • EVERYONE’S happiness counts equally.
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5
Q

Liberation campaigns (96)

A
  • A mental switch is necessary—challenge to dominant ideology.
  • Women’s rights mocked as just as implausible as animal rights (97).
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6
Q

Basic Principle of Equality

A
  • Does not imply that we have to treat every group IDENTICALLY.
  • It does imply equality of consideration (of comparable interests).
  • Discuss abortion, voting etc. (97).
  • So, let’s be consistent . . . Find the moral basis for opposing discrimination and see whether it applies to animals too (98).
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7
Q

What does Singer mean by the “principle of equality?”

A

Do not rest the case for equal rights on actual equality (98)

  • Still would not rule out other forms of anti-equality (IQ)
  • Even if there are differences in races and sexes, we still want to say it would be wrong to discriminate (98).
  • What do you make of Singer’s overall comparison of treatment of animals to racism and sexism? Are there are any important differences?
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8
Q

Having INTERESTS key to deserving moral consideration (100).

A
  1. A necessary condition for having interests is the capacity for pleasure and pain (sentience).
  2. Beings who can’t feel pleasure or pain don’t care about what happens to them.
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9
Q

SENTIENCE

A

Beings who can feel pain automatically have a minimal interest in not suffering.

  • The capacity for pleasure and pain is THE morally relevant characteristic that draws the line between those how can be morally wronged and those who cannot.
  • “If a being suffers, there can be no moral justification for refusing to take that suffering into consideration” (100).
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10
Q

Speciesism

A

“A prejudice or attitude of bias toward the interests of members of one’s own species and against those of members of other species?” (100).

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11
Q

Foundations of Singer’s Approach

A
  1. A being deserves equal consideration if and only if it has interests. Dwell on this!
  2. If a being has interests, then it is sentient.
  3. If a being is sentient, then it is capable of pleasure and pain.
    4 Implied: utilitarian principle that we are morally obligated to maximize pleasure and minimize pain.
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12
Q

Deserves moral consideration >

A

has interests

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13
Q

Has interests >

A

has capacity to feel pleasure and pain.

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14
Q

Capacity for pleasure and pain >

A

sentience

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15
Q

Deserves moral consideration >

A

sentience

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16
Q

Eating and Experimenting

A

Treat similar cases similar ways.
- Does the pleasure we get from eating animals override their interest in not suffering?
Experimenting:
- Why not experiment on humans? (101).
- Consider the argument from marginal cases.

17
Q

Frankena’s View

A

Argument: humans deserve special consideration because they are capable of pursuing satisfying, good lives by using their powers of thought.

  • Does every human have this capability?
  • What about intellectually defective humans? (102).
  • Does every non-human lack it?
18
Q

Human Dignity

A
  • Why do humans possess inherent dignity?

- Great Chain of Being, with humans near the top.

19
Q

Human Dignity: contemporary view

A

all humans have intrinsic dignity just because . . .

Because they are a member of a species? What makes that species so special: rationality? (103).

20
Q

Benn’s Argument

A

The “rationality” of human beings is the norm—it is what gives them their special status.
Even if the characteristics of humans and animals overlap, a human does not become a member of another species when he/she lacks normal human traits.

21
Q

Singer asks (response to Benn)

A

why would it be unfair to experiment on a defective human just because he/she is a human, but not a dog? Isn’t this just preference of one’s own species? (104-105).