000 02283nam a2200229 a 4500
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003 Monogr.mrc
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008 04-Feb-19s2012 Newa grp 000 0 eng
020 _a9780521149334
_c1764
082 0 0 _aH21
_bC149
100 _aCamosy, Charles C
245 _aPeter Singer and Christian Ethics
_b Beyond Polarization
260 _aNew York
_bCambridge University
_c2012
300 _a278p
500 _aincludes index and biblioraphy
505 2 _aIntroduction Who is Peter Singer? Thesis and method of this book A note about my approach as a Christian 1 Abortion Introduction Issues on which Singer and the Church agree The moral status of the fetus A disagreement over potential Objections to the argument from potential Conclusion 2 Euthanasia and the end of life Introduction Moral status at the end of life Medical treatment and care of persons at the end of life From morality to public policy Conclusion 3 Non-human animals Introduction Singer on how we treat non-human animals Singer on reforming our practices and attitudes The Church on non-human animals: current teaching The Church on non-human animals: scripture and tradition The Church on non-human animals: some modern approaches Are some non-human animals persons? Conclusion 4 Duties to the poor Introduction The arguments Christian overlap with Singer Responding to objections Common objectives Impartiality in duties to the poor? The Church on partial preferences A broader understanding of poverty? How serious are our duties to the poor? Conclusion 5 Ethical theory Introduction Consequence-based reasoning Rules-based reasoning A common consequentialist approach? Christian utilitarianism? The principle of double effect The place of exceptionless moral norms More on proportionate reasoning Conclusion 6 Singer`s shift? Introduction Objectivity and preference utilitarianism Objectivity and Christian ethics Singer on preferences, interests, and happiness A Christian understanding: loving your neighbor as yourself Teleology and the possibility of conversation Conclusion
700 1 _aCamosy, Charles C
902 _bSFS
942 _cBK
999 _c44514
_d44514