All Thinkers

Peter Singer

Peter Singer is an Australian philosopher. He is one of the most widely read living philosophers and one of the most controversial. He was born on 6 July 1946 in Melbourne, Australia. His parents were Austrian Jews who had escaped Vienna in 1938 after the Nazi annexation of Austria. Three of his grandparents were killed in the Holocaust. This family history shaped his lifelong concern with preventable suffering. He studied law, history, and philosophy at the University of Melbourne, then went to Oxford for his graduate work. It was at Oxford in the early 1970s that he began serious work on the ethics of how humans treat animals. His 1975 book Animal Liberation became a founding text of the modern animal rights movement. It has sold over half a million copies and has been translated into many languages. He has taught at La Trobe University in Australia, Monash University, New York University, and since 1999 at Princeton University in the United States, where he holds the Ira W. DeCamp Professorship of Bioethics. His appointment at Princeton caused controversy. Disability rights activists protested some of his views on severely disabled newborns. He has written or edited more than forty books and hundreds of articles. His most influential are Animal Liberation (1975), Practical Ethics (1979), The Life You Can Save (2009), and The Most Good You Can Do (2015). He co-founded The Life You Can Save organisation, which encourages effective giving to reduce global poverty. He is one of the founding figures of the effective altruism movement. He is still active in his late seventies.

Origin
Australia (currently United States)
Lifespan
1946-present
Era
Late 20th-Early 21st Century
Subjects
Ethics Utilitarianism Animal Rights Effective Altruism Bioethics
Why They Matter

Singer matters because he has used careful philosophical argument to change real behaviour. Most philosophers are read mainly by other philosophers. Singer is read by activists, doctors, policymakers, and ordinary people who change how they live after reading him. His book Animal Liberation helped create the modern animal rights movement. Factory farming practices that were once unquestioned are now debated in boardrooms, parliaments, and dinner tables partly because of Singer's work.

He matters for a second reason. He asks uncomfortable questions about the ethics of affluence. In The Life You Can Save, he argues that people in rich countries who spend money on luxuries while children die of preventable diseases are doing something seriously wrong. This is not a comfortable argument. It challenges almost everyone in wealthy societies. Singer himself gives away a large portion of his income. His work has shaped the effective altruism movement, which encourages evidence-based giving to causes where each dollar does the most good.

He also matters because he models how philosophy can engage with real problems. He does not restrict himself to specialist journals. He writes books for general readers in clear prose. He debates publicly. He changes his mind when good arguments are presented. He has been sharply criticised, including by disability rights activists whose objections he has had to answer. These debates are themselves part of how his work has shaped public ethics. Singer is a genuine test case for what an engaged public philosopher can do.

Key Ideas
1
All Suffering Matters
2
Speciesism
3
The Drowning Child
Key Quotations
"The question is not, Can they reason? nor, Can they talk? but, Can they suffer?"
— Animal Liberation, 1975, quoting Jeremy Bentham, Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, 1789
This famous line comes originally from the 18th-century utilitarian Jeremy Bentham. Singer made it the foundation of his argument about animals. The question of whether a being deserves moral consideration does not depend on intelligence or language. It depends on whether the being can suffer. A being that can suffer has an interest in not suffering. Ignoring that interest because the being is a different species is like ignoring it because of race or sex. For students, this short, sharp quote opens the whole argument of Animal Liberation.
"If it is in our power to prevent something bad from happening, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, we ought, morally, to do it."
— Famine, Affluence, and Morality, 1972
This principle is the core of Singer's argument about helping strangers. It sounds reasonable in the abstract. Then Singer applies it. Preventable death is very bad. A donation that could prevent it costs almost nothing in comparison. So we ought to donate. The principle is carefully stated. 'Comparable moral importance' is the key phrase. Singer does not demand we sacrifice our own lives for small gains. He asks whether our luxuries really matter as much as strangers' lives. For students, the quote is an excellent example of how clear philosophical writing can lead to surprising conclusions.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When students first think about how humans treat animals
How to introduce
Ask students where the food on their plate came from. Not just what species but how it was raised, killed, and transported. Then introduce Singer's basic question: does the suffering of the animal matter morally? Most students will say yes. Then ask why we still eat factory-farmed meat if we believe animals' suffering matters. This is a respectful way to introduce the argument without pressuring students to change their diet. Singer's point is that how we act and what we believe should line up.
Ethical Thinking When discussing what we owe to strangers
How to introduce
Share the drowning-child thought experiment. Most students will say they would save the child. Then gently introduce the extension: children die daily of preventable causes; you could help. Ask students to think through the comparison. Is distance morally relevant? Is visibility? This is a respectful discussion that works even for students with very different financial situations. The point is not to produce guilt but to develop careful moral thinking.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, Singer's own The Life You Can Save (2009) is short, clear, and covers his main arguments on global poverty. Animal Liberation in its original or revised edition is a powerful read. For those who prefer shorter pieces, his 1972 essay 'Famine, Affluence, and Morality' is only about 20 pages and remains one of the most influential short papers in ethics. Many interviews with Singer are available on YouTube, including conversations with Sam Harris and others. The Life You Can Save website (thelifeyoucansave.org) includes a free audiobook of the second edition with chapters read by celebrities.

Key Ideas
1
Utilitarianism and Its Demands
2
Effective Altruism
3
Animal Liberation
Key Quotations
"The notion that human life is sacred just because it is human life is medieval."
— Writings on a Life Ethic, in various forms across Singer's career
This is one of Singer's more provocative statements. He rejects what he calls 'sanctity of life' ethics, which he associates with older religious traditions. For Singer, it is not simply being human that makes a life morally important. It is having certain capacities, especially conscious experience and the ability to have interests. This position is coherent with his utilitarianism but it is deeply unpopular with many religious traditions. For students, the quote is a good starting point for discussing whether species membership matters morally. Most people have strong intuitions about this. Singer asks us to examine them.
"The expanding circle of moral concern is one of the most important developments in human history."
— The Expanding Circle: Ethics, Evolution, and Moral Progress, 1981
Singer's book The Expanding Circle traces how human morality has gradually expanded its reach. Early humans cared about their immediate tribe. Then their nation. Then all humans regardless of race or sex. Singer argues this circle should keep expanding to include animals and future generations. Moral progress is the expansion of whose interests we take seriously. This is a hopeful view of ethics. It treats moral improvement as a real possibility, not a fantasy. For students, the quote gives a framework for thinking about moral history. Past generations had blind spots we have partly overcome. We have our own blind spots. Recognising this is itself a moral act.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Critical Thinking When studying how philosophical arguments can change real-world behaviour
How to introduce
Tell students about Animal Liberation. When it was published in 1975, factory farming was almost unquestioned in most Western countries. Today, many countries have animal welfare laws, labelling requirements, and public debate about meat consumption. Singer's arguments contributed to this change. Ask students: how does philosophy influence society? Is it mainly through politics, media, personal persuasion, or something else? This is a useful conversation for students considering any career in public life.
Problem Solving When teaching students how to think carefully about giving and volunteering
How to introduce
Ask students: if you wanted to help people as much as possible, what would you do? Most will mention donating or volunteering. Then introduce the ideas of effective altruism. Not all charities are equally effective. Some prevent a child's death for a few hundred pounds. Others do almost nothing with large sums. Careful thinking about evidence matters. This introduces students to rigorous thinking about doing good. It also gives them real tools they can use now or later, through organisations like GiveWell.
Ethical Thinking When exploring the ethics of affluence
How to introduce
Ask students to list things they have bought in the last month that were not necessary: a coffee, a new shirt, a streaming subscription. Then ask what that money could have done if given to an effective charity. Singer argues the comparison is ethically serious. This is a discussion to handle with care. It can make students feel guilty or defensive. Frame it as a question, not an accusation. The goal is to develop honest thinking about how we live, not to produce shame.
Further Reading

For deeper engagement, Practical Ethics (1979, third edition 2011) is Singer's most systematic work. The Point of View of the Universe (2014), co-written with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek, develops his mature philosophical position. For Singer's views on effective altruism, The Most Good You Can Do (2015) is accessible and provocative. For critical engagement, Dale Jamieson's edited volume Singer and His Critics brings together major responses. Harriet McBryde Johnson's essay 'Unspeakable Conversations' (New York Times Magazine, 2003) is essential reading for the disability rights critique.

Key Ideas
1
The Disability Rights Critique
2
Changing Views on Objective Value
3
Global Poverty and the Demandingness Objection
Key Quotations
"The most plausible view of the wrongness of killing is not that killing is always wrong, but that killing has different degrees of wrongness depending on the nature of the being killed."
— Paraphrased from Practical Ethics, 1979
This is one of Singer's most controversial positions. He argues that not all killing is equally wrong. Killing a bacterium is different from killing a chicken, which is different from killing a human adult. The degree of wrongness depends on what the being is and has. For many religious and secular traditions, this view is deeply troubling. All human killing, they say, is equally wrong (leaving aside special cases like self-defence). Singer's position leads him to controversial conclusions, including his views on severely disabled newborns. Disability rights activists have strongly contested this reasoning. For advanced students, the quote is a case study in how one philosophical premise, carefully followed, can lead to conclusions that many find unacceptable. It is a useful test of how much we trust philosophical argument against deep intuitions.
"Giving five hundred dollars to the International Red Cross is the moral equivalent of rescuing a drowning child, except that the Red Cross rescues children you cannot see."
— Paraphrased from The Life You Can Save, 2009
Singer's argument about giving is sometimes called the 'distance does not matter' thesis. If it is wrong to walk past a drowning child you can see, it is also wrong to walk past one you cannot see, provided you can help. Distance is just a fact about geography. It is not a moral fact. This quote captures the core move. Most of us, hearing it, feel uncomfortable. We sense something is being pushed too far. But Singer's challenge is this: what exactly is the disanalogy? Intuitions about distance may be remnants of a time when we could only help neighbours. Now we can help far away. Our ethics has not caught up. For advanced students, this is a serious ethical question. It is easy to dismiss but hard to answer.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When studying how philosophers disagree about the ethics of life and death
How to introduce
Singer's views on severely disabled newborns have been strongly criticised by disability rights activists. Read with older students Harriet McBryde Johnson's essay 'Unspeakable Conversations', which describes her debates with Singer. Ask: what is the relationship between philosophical argument and lived experience? Can a thinker's arguments be rigorous and still be badly mistaken? This is a serious discussion about the limits of ethics-as-calculation.
Ethical Thinking When examining whether ethics should be universal or relational
How to introduce
Singer's ethics says each being's interests count equally. Your child's happiness does not count more than a stranger's child's happiness. Most people find this counter-intuitive. We do care more about our own families. Is this a moral failing or a moral fact? Some philosophers, including some feminist ethicists, have argued that special relationships matter morally in ways Singer's universalism cannot capture. This is a serious debate for advanced students. It helps them see that ethics has several different starting points, each with strengths and weaknesses.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Singer argues that animals are as valuable as humans.

What to teach instead

He does not. He argues that similar interests deserve similar consideration. A human adult has more complex interests (plans for the future, deep relationships) than a chicken does. A chicken's interests in not suffering still matter, but in terms of what can be lost, a human life and a chicken life are different. Singer's view is that suffering should be weighed the same whoever experiences it. He is not claiming all beings are morally equivalent. This is a common misreading and it makes his actual argument easier to dismiss.

Common misconception

Effective altruism is about donating as much as possible with no concern for impact.

What to teach instead

It is the opposite. The whole point of effective altruism is that impact matters. Giving blindly to whatever cause feels emotional is not effective altruism. Careful research into which charities produce the most benefit per dollar is. The movement has produced concrete tools (GiveWell, the Global Priorities Institute) to help donors make evidence-based decisions. Critics have raised real concerns, but the basic idea is that giving should be thoughtful, not that it should be sentimental or unlimited.

Common misconception

Singer's views are a direct application of classical utilitarianism and have not changed.

What to teach instead

His views have evolved. In his early career he was a preference utilitarian, arguing that what matters is satisfying beings' preferences. In 2014, working with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek, he shifted to a more objective account of what is good. He has also revised specific positions in bioethics. This evolution is philosophically important and shows Singer does not just defend a fixed system. He reasons and updates.

Common misconception

Effective altruism is discredited by the FTX collapse.

What to teach instead

The cryptocurrency exchange FTX collapsed in 2022. Its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, had publicly identified with effective altruism. He was later convicted of massive fraud. This was a real scandal. But most effective altruists had no role in or knowledge of the fraud. The movement has had to examine its own culture, its relationship to wealth, and the risks of 'earning to give' as a strategy. These are serious reflections. The core idea (that evidence should guide giving) is not invalidated by one person's crimes. Singer has engaged with these questions publicly.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Immanuel Kant
Singer works in the utilitarian tradition, which stands in contrast to Kant's duty-based ethics. Kant argued that morality comes from universal principles derived by reason. Singer argues morality comes from weighing consequences for all affected beings. The two traditions have argued for two centuries. Reading Singer alongside Kant is a good way for students to see the two major branches of modern ethics side by side. Both traditions claim universality; they differ on what grounds it.
In Dialogue With
Martha Nussbaum
Nussbaum and Singer represent two very different approaches to global justice ethics. Singer's utilitarianism calculates aggregate welfare. Nussbaum's capabilities approach lists specific things every person should be able to do and be. They have engaged publicly. They agree on many practical matters (concern for global poverty, concern for animals). They disagree on theoretical foundations. Reading them together gives students two serious models for thinking about what we owe distant others.
In Dialogue With
John Rawls
Rawls's theory of justice focuses on fairness within a society. Singer argues this is not enough: we have duties to distant strangers, not just fellow citizens. Their disagreement is one of the major debates in modern political philosophy. Singer says Rawls's framework is parochial. Rawls's followers say Singer's utilitarianism ignores important distinctions between people. Reading them together shows two very different approaches to the foundations of modern ethics.
Complements
Muhammad Yunus
Yunus developed microfinance as a practical intervention against global poverty. Singer has argued philosophically for our duties to address global poverty. They represent practice and theory meeting on the same ground. Both have been controversial, Yunus for the limits and failures of microfinance in some contexts, Singer for the demanding character of his ethical claims. Reading them together shows how philosophy and practice can work on the same problem from different directions.
Develops
Rachel Carson
Carson's Silent Spring started the modern environmental movement. Singer's Animal Liberation extended ethical concern to individual animals as well as to ecosystems. Carson focused on species and environments; Singer focused on individual sentient beings. Together they represent two key threads in modern thinking about our responsibilities to nonhuman life. Students interested in environmental ethics should encounter both.
Anticipates
Nadia Murad
Murad's work on behalf of Yazidi survivors and against sexual violence draws on the same moral intuition Singer has pressed: distant suffering matters, and we have responsibilities we often ignore. Murad speaks from personal experience of persecution; Singer argues philosophically. They do very different kinds of work but share the commitment to making ignored suffering visible. Reading them together helps students see that advocacy and philosophy are complementary.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, The Expanding Circle (1981, second edition 2011) develops Singer's evolutionary account of moral progress. His Ethics in the Real World (2016) gathers shorter essays on specific applied ethics topics. For serious critique, Peter Singer Under Fire (2009), edited by Jeffrey Schaler, collects major critical responses with Singer's replies. On effective altruism, Doing Good Better by William MacAskill extends Singer's framework. Iason Gabriel's 'Effective Altruism and Its Critics' (Journal of Applied Philosophy, 2017) surveys the main objections. For disability and ethics, Eva Feder Kittay's work offers the most sustained philosophical response to Singer's views.