Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Peter Singer and Christian ethics are far closer than almost anyone has imagined, and this book is valuable for those who are interested in fresh thinking about the relationship between religious and secular ethics.
Peter Singer and Christian Ethics: Beyond Polarization. By Charles C. Camosy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012. vii + 278 pages. $29.99. REVIEWS 93 that he brings these texts into active dialogue with contemporary epistemology to be equally worthy of praise—and I cannot disagree.
Virtue Ethics, Natural Law Ethics, Divine Command Ethics, and Prophetic Ethics were presented and defended by various authors, experts in their fields. This book review was written as a hermeneutical investigation of each author's faithfulness to the Scriptural texts.
1 Ιαν 2014 · PDF | Peter Singer’s “Copernican revolution” against a sanctity of life ethic may be regarded, from a Roman Catholic viewpoint, as an expression of the... | Find, read and cite all the ...
The ethic of Peter Singer—the renowned and controversial Ira W. Decamp Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University—and a Christian ethic—which, for purposes of the book that is the subject of this proposal, means a broadly-conceived Roman Catholic moral tradition—are thought to be diametrically opposed. Many label Singer a leader of ‘the culture of death’; he in turn rarely ...
Peter Singer, Rethinking Life and Death. Singer's support of infanticide, euthanasia, and bestiality shows the consistency of an anti-Christian, ultimately antihuman philosophy.
PETER SINGER AND CHRISTIAN ETHICS. Interaction between Peter Singer and Christian ethics, to the extent that it has happened at all, has been unproductive and often antagon-istic. Singer sees himself as leading a “Copernican revolution” against a sanctity-of-life ethic, while many Christians associate his work with a “culture of death.”