This weekend the New York Times magazine has an article by Princeton philosopher Peter Singer, on the subject of philantropy, poverty and ethics.
Singer is known for his position that all human lives have the same value, a position that sounds entirely uncontroversial until one starts to explore its ramifications. Consider for example the case of real estate investor Zell Kravinsky.
Kravinsky gave almost all of his \$45 million real estate fortune to health-related charities, retaining only his modest family home in Jenkintown, near Philadelphia, and enough to meet his family’s ordinary expenses. After learning that thousands of people with failing kidneys die each year while waiting for a transplant, he contacted a Philadelphia hospital and donated one of his kidneys to a complete stranger.
[...] Kravinsky has a mathematical mind — a talent that obviously helped him in deciding what investments would prove profitable — and he says that the chances of dying as a result of donating a kidney are about 1 in 4,000. For him this implies that to withhold a kidney from someone who would otherwise die means valuing one’s own life at 4,000 times that of a stranger, a ratio Kravinsky considers “obscene.”
I have to say that I have never found Utilitarianism convincing (and you don’t want to get an Utilitarian started with his mental experiments), even though I admit that there is hardly any known better premise on which to reason about Ethics.
The article has a lot of interesting information, including the following argument, which I had never seen before in these terms:
Thomas Pogge, a philosopher at Columbia University, has argued that at least some of our affluence comes at the expense of the poor. He bases this claim not simply on the usual critique of the barriers that Europe and the United States maintain against agricultural imports from developing countries but also on less familiar aspects of our trade with developing countries. For example, he points out that international corporations are willing to make deals to buy natural resources from any government, no matter how it has come to power. This provides a huge financial incentive for groups to try to overthrow the existing government. Successful rebels are rewarded by being able to sell off the nation’s oil, minerals or timber.
In their dealings with corrupt dictators in developing countries, Pogge asserts, international corporations are morally no better than someone who knowingly buys stolen goods [...]

7 comments
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December 18, 2006 at 3:00 am
Anonymous
Thomas Poffe’s argument sounds very much in line with what Maxists or communists believe or propagate.
If economy is THE foundation of any ideologies, there is nothing surprising about this idea at all.
December 18, 2006 at 5:40 am
David Molnar
This is only tangentially related, but my favorite take on mental experiments in ethics is this:
CAN BAD MEN MAKE GOOD BRAINS DO BAD THINGS?
Michael F. Patton, Jr.
Syracuse University
http://www.mindspring.com/~mfpatton/Tissues.htm
With respect to Pogge’s argument, I look forward to reading the article. Still, from this excerpt it isn’t clear whether he would distinguish between different groups of rebels, even though one might naively want to call some rebellions “good” and others not. (For a silly example, take the revolution that created the United States.)
December 18, 2006 at 11:23 pm
Moshe Vardi
Peter Singer reminds me of Mr. Spock. His logic is flawless, but the conclusions do not make sense.
December 19, 2006 at 2:09 am
Anonymous
For a silly example, take the revolution that created the United States.
Is this one supposed to be good or bad?
December 20, 2006 at 1:54 am
Luca
“Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.”
December 21, 2006 at 2:15 pm
Anonymous
Ahh all ethic is subjective, all life is meaningless and all thought is futile.
December 21, 2006 at 10:38 pm
Anonymous
To Anonymous #3
“Desire itself is movement
Not in itself desirable;
Love is itself unmoving,
Only the cause and end of movement,
Timeless, and undesiring
Except in the aspect of time
Caught in the form of limitation
Between un-being and being.”