Most Helpful Customer Reviews
75 of 80 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An audacious undertaking, and Singer pulls it off, February 18, 1999
By A Customer
Singer tackles "the big one," the meaning of life, in this book, and damned if he doesn't figure it out. In my opinion. (Your mileage may vary.) His approach is take you through a few thousand years of philosophy/economics/political science to get to the answer that a life spent trying to help others and reduce suffering is really the most moral, and most fulfilling one. It's a fascinating, and important, book. OK. I do have one small quibble. (Forgive me, I'm a quibbler.) Singer, correctly, I think, sees some uses of psychotherapy as self-indulgent and an attempt to rationalize away the moral emptiness that comes from leading a materialistically oriented life. However, I think he underestimates the need for people to come to terms with the forces that create a self that can't keep its "owner" from suffering. You have to be able to help yourself as well as others. The process of individuation, of becoming your own creative person, is important in human happiness. It's not as moral as purely devoting yourself to others, but I think there is room for both. I don't think Singer would disagree (maybe he would?). That, I think minor, quibble aside, I think the book is a really cool exploration of a really important question that we all ask ourselves, but that few (non-religious types) have spent enough time thinking about. I, for one, am glad that Peter Singer is around and thinking about it.
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38 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent for lay audience, fair for philosophers, February 18, 1999
By A Customer
I recently assigned this book for my Introduction to Ethics course. The early chapters reply to the argument that we are by nature selfish. Singer does an excellent job arguing that evolutionary theory demonstrates no such thing, while still leaving room for true ethical decision making (i.e. evolution also does not determine that we be ethical). His discussion of the prisoners dilemma is also quite clear and interesting. In later chapters he tries to convince his audience that they will be happier if they lead lives committed to ethics. The argument here is not as clear or as persuasive and my students began to find him annoying (especially his repeated use of vegetarians/animal rights activists as happy without any accompaning defense of the animal rights position). All in all though, it is quite wonderful that a philosopher has written a book that is so accessible for lay audiences.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Singer, like Gandhi, knows "a way out of hell.", July 7, 1998
Singer compellingly shows how our misunderstanding of self-interest has led us to the brink of social and ecological disaster. He unmasks the errors that have led us down this path. Best of all, he offers an alternative -- a new understanding of self-interest, one that embraces both altruism and ethical integrity. What a humane and reasonable book! To be sure, the book is not perfect. The chapter on Japan is dated, and the passages on animal rights and feminism are too brief to be more than "thought-starters." More importantly, Singer is sometimes less than balanced in his criticisms of other thinkers (e.g., Socrates, Kant, Jesus, Franklin). But the virtues of the book, including it's readability, far outweigh it's limitations. Students in my Moral Issues course found the book engaging and illuminating.
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