The Life You Can Save Quotes
The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
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Peter Singer6,845 ratings, 4.15 average rating, 894 reviews
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The Life You Can Save Quotes
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“Hebrew word for "charity" tzedakah, simply means "justice" and as this suggests, for Jews, giving to the poor is no optional extra but an essential part of living a just life.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Extreme poverty is not only a condition of unsatisfied material needs. It is often accompanied by a degrading state of powerlessness. ”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Putting yourself in the place of others...is what thinking ethically is all about.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Evolution has no moral direction. An evolutionary understanding of human nature can explain the differing intuitions we have when we are faced with an individual rather than with a mass of people, or with people close to us rather than with those far away, but it does not justify those feelings.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“In the past 20 years alone, it adds up to more death than were caused by all the civil and international wars adn government repression of the entire twentieth century, the century of Hitler and Stalin. How much would we give to prevent those horrors? Yet how little are we doing to prevent today's even larger toll and all the misery that it involves? I believe that if you read this book to the end, and look honestly and carefully at our situation, assessing both the facts and the ethical arguments, you will agree that we must act.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“...moral relativism, a position many find attractive only until they are faced with someone who is doing something really, really wrong.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“If it is so easy to help people in real need through no fault of their own, and yet we fail to do so, aren’t we doing something wrong? At a minimum, I hope this book will persuade you that there is something deeply askew with our widely accepted views about what it is to live a good life.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“The world would be a much simpler place if one could bring about social change merely by making a logically consistent moral argument.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“A majority of people in these surveys also said that America gives too much aid--but when they were asked how much America should give, the median answers ranged from 5 percent to 10 percent of government spending. In other words, people wanted foreign aid 'cut' to an amount five to ten times greater than the United States actually gives!”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Thomas Aquinas, the great medieval scholar whose ideas became the semi-official philosophy of the Roman Catholic church, wrote that whatever we have in “superabundance”—that is, above and beyond what will reasonably satisfy our own needs and those of our family, for the present and the foreseeable future—“is owed, of natural right, to the poor for their sustenance.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“If you are paying for something to drink when safe drinking water comes out of the tap, you have money to spend on things you don’t really need. Around the world, a billion people struggle to live each day on less than you paid for that drink.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“If you are paying for something to drink when safe drinking water comes out of the tap, you have money to spend on things you don’t really need.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“Christian magazine Sojourners, likes to point out that the Bible contains more than three thousand references to alleviating poverty—enough reason, he thinks, for making this a central moral issue for Christians.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“There is a new wave of interest in exploring how to frame choices so that people make better decisions. Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, professors of economics and law, respectively, teamed up to write Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness, which advocates using defaults to nudge us to make better choices.9 Even when we are choosing in our own interests, we often choose unwisely. When employees have the option of participating in a retirement-savings scheme, many do not, despite the financial advantages of doing so. If their employer instead automatically enrolls them, giving them the choice of opting out, participation jumps dramatically”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Asking people to give more than almost anyone else gives risks turning them off. It might cause some to question the point of striving to live an ethical life at all. Daunted by what it takes to do the right thing, they may ask themselves why they are bothering to try. To avoid that danger, we should advocate a level of giving that will lead to the greatest possible positive response.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“have demonstrated that giving money to poor families: Does not reduce the amount that adults work, but does reduce child labor; Raises school attendance; Increases economic autonomy; Increases women’s decision-making power; Leads to greater diversity in diet. Stimulates more use of health services.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“Charity begins at home, the saying goes, and for many people, charity also stops at home, or not very far from it.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“I guess basically one wants to feel that one’s life has amounted to more than just consuming products and generating garbage. I think that one likes to look back and say that one’s done the best one can to make this a better place for others. You can look at it from this point of view: What greater motivation can there be than doing whatever one possibly can to reduce pain and suffering?”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“In the Talmud (a record of discussions of Jewish law and ethics by ancient rabbis) it is said that charity is equal in importance to all the other commandments combined, and that Jews should give at least 10 percent of their income as tzedakah.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“I’m hoping that you will look at the larger picture and think about what it takes to live ethically in a world in which 18 million people are dying unnecessarily each year. That’s a higher annual death rate than in World War II. In the past twenty years alone, it adds up to more deaths than were caused by all the civil and international wars and government repression of the entire twentieth century, the century of Hitler and Stalin. How much would we give to prevent those horrors? Yet how little are we doing to prevent today’s even larger toll, and all the misery that it involves?”
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to play your part in ending world poverty
“Is the fact that other people are not doing their fair share a sufficient reason for allowing a child to die when you could easily rescue that child? I think the answer is clear: No. The others have, by refusing to help with the rescue, made themselves irrelevant. They might as well be so many rocks. According to the fair-share view, in fact, it would be better for the children if they were rocks, because then you would be obliged to wade back into the pond to save another child.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“In the United States, 97 percent of those classified by the Census Bureau as poor own a color TV.”
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty
“Do we think that our interests are best fulfilled by conspicuously consuming as many expensive items as possible, so that everyone knows we are rich? Or do we include among our interests the satisfactions that come from helping others?”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“When walking in London, Thomas Hobbes, the 17th-century philosopher who famously held that all our actions are self-interested, gave a coin to a beggar. His companion, eager to catch the great man out, told Hobbes that he had just refuted his own theory. Not so, Hobbes responded: he gave the money because it pleased him to see the poor man happy. Hobbes thus avoided the refutation of his theory by widening the notion of self-interest so that it is compatible with a great deal of generosity and compassion.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“Patterns of behavior that helped our ancestors survive and reproduce may, in today's very different circumstances, be of no benefit to us or to our descendants. Even if some evolved intuition or way of acting were still conducive to our survival and reproduction, however, that would not, as Darwin himself recognized, make it right. Evolution has no moral direction.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“The "drops in the ocean" response to the argument for giving aid overlooks the fact that my aid will help specific individuals, families, or even villages, and the good that I do for them is not lessened by the fact that there are many more needy people I cannot help.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“Our parochial feelings are a restriction on our willingness to act on our capacity, both financial and technological, to give to those beyond the borders of our nation and thereby to do much more good than we can do if our philanthropy stops at those borders.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“The fact that we tend to favor our families, communities, and countries may explain our failure to save the lives of the poor beyond those boundaries, but it does not justify that failure from an ethical perspective, no matter how many generations of our ancestors have seen nothing wrong with it.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
“Just as capital grows when invested, so the costs of fixing social problems are likely to grow.”
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
― The Life You Can Save: How to Do Your Part to End World Poverty
