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How Are We to Live?
How Are We to Live?: Ethics in an Age of Self-Interest | Peter Singer
1 post | 1 read
Is there still anything worth living for? Is anything worth pursuing, apart from money, love, and caring for one's own family?Internationally known social philosopher and ethicist Peter Singer has an answer to these and other questions in this compelling new volume. If we can detach ourselves from our own immediate preoccupations and look at the world as a whole and our place in it, there is something absurd about the idea that people should have trouble finding something to live for.Singer suggests that people who take an ethical approach to life often avoid the trap of meaninglessness, finding a deeper satisfaction in what they are doing than those people whose goals are narrower and more self-centered. He spells out what he means by an ethical approach to life, and shows that it can bring about significant and far-reaching changes to one's life.After completing each section, the reader will be compelled to stop and ponder for a while. -San Antonio Current. . . extremely well written. -Mind (UK)Imagine that you could choose a book that everyone in the world would read. My choice would be this book by Peter Singer. It is a good philosophy book, which covers many historical, social, and biological issues with command and verve, but I would choose it because its persuasive power could change many people's lives for the better, both from their own point of view and from that of the world as a whole. -Ethics
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review
mija333
Bailedbailed

About the decisions we make and the influence they have on our search for meaning. An analysis of the yearn for profits over ethics. This book was written in 95‘ so some of the references are a bit outdated: although it does have some contemporary/timeless themes. I wouldn‘t bother reading this, but some may find it a useful reminder that meaning can‘t be found in the enduring fight for money. And will be found in charitable actions instead.