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Peter Singer
COMMENTARY / World
Jul 1, 2010
Why is it OK to cheat in professional soccer?
MELBOURNE — Shortly before half-time in the World Cup elimination match between England and Germany on Sunday, English midfielder Frank Lampard had a shot at goal that struck the crossbar and bounced down onto the ground, clearly over the goal line. German goalkeeper Manuel Neuer grabbed the ball...
COMMENTARY / World
Jun 16, 2010
Synthetic biology's promise outweighs its risks
MELBOURNE — In the 16th century, the alchemist Paracelsus offered a recipe for creating a living being that began with putting sperm into putrefying "venter equinus." This is usually translated as "horse manure," but the Latin "venter" means abdomen or uterus.
COMMENTARY / World
Apr 30, 2010
A cloud over airplane safety
PRINCETON, N.J. — When airports across Europe reopened after the closure caused by the eruption of Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull volcano, it was not because the amount of ash in the atmosphere had dropped, but because the risk that the ash posed to airplane safety had been reassessed. Was it new scientific...
COMMENTARY / World
Apr 5, 2010
The unknown promise of Internet freedom
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COMMENTARY / World
Mar 11, 2010
Free Tilly and other circus animals
MELBOURNE, Australia — Last month, at the Sea World amusement park in Florida, a whale grabbed a trainer, Dawn Brancheau, pulled her under water, and thrashed about with her. By the time rescuers arrived, Brancheau was dead.
COMMENTARY / World
Feb 23, 2010
Needs of Haiti and the limits of generosity
MELBOURNE, Australia — All over the world, people have responded generously to the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti. In just three days, more than a million Americans had donated $10 by sending text messages from their cell phones. People with very little themselves, like Maria Pacheco,...
COMMENTARY / World
Jan 7, 2010
Keys to keeping your New Year's resolutions
MELBOURNE — Did you make any New Year's resolutions? Perhaps you resolved to get fit, to lose weight, to save more money or to drink less alcohol. Or your resolution may have been more altruistic: to help those in need, or to reduce your carbon footprint. But are you keeping your resolution?
COMMENTARY / World
Dec 17, 2009
Do humanoid robots deserve to have rights?
PRINCETON/WARSAW — Last month, Gecko Systems announced that it had been running trials of its "fully autonomous personal companion home care robot," also known as a "carebot," designed to help elderly or disabled people to live independently. A woman with short-term memory loss broke into a big...
COMMENTARY / World
Nov 18, 2009
Slippery slope of doctor-assisted euthanasia
PRINCETON — Of all the arguments against voluntary euthanasia, the most influential is the "slippery slope": once we allow doctors to kill patients, we will not be able to limit the killing to those who want to die.
COMMENTARY / World
Oct 23, 2009
A day to act in the name of planetary justice
PRINCETON, N.J. — What we are doing to our planet, to our children and grandchildren, and to the poor, by our heedless production of greenhouse gases, is one of the great moral wrongs of our age. This Saturday is a day to stand up against this injustice.
COMMENTARY / World
Sep 3, 2009
Crime, punishment and the quality of mercy
PRINCETON, N.J. — The recent release of Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, convicted of blowing up Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988, sparked outrage.
COMMENTARY / World
Aug 25, 2009
Opening a regulated market for kidney sales
PRINCETON, N.J. — The arrest in New York last month of Levy-Izhak Rosenbaum, a Brooklyn businessman whom police allege tried to broker a deal to buy a kidney for $160,000, coincided with the passage of a law in Singapore that some say will open the way for organ trading there.
COMMENTARY / World
Jul 18, 2009
German genetics law a double-edged sword
MELBOURNE — In April, Germany's parliament placed limits on the use of genetic diagnosis. Is the new German law a model for other countries to follow as we grapple with the ethical issues posed by our growing knowledge of human genetics?
COMMENTARY / World
Jun 21, 2009
Sustainable welfare plus profits
MELBOURNE — Something new is happening at Harvard Business School. As graduation nears for the first class to complete their master of business administration since the onset of the global financial crisis, students are circulating an oath that commits them to an "ethical" pursuit of their work;...
COMMENTARY / World
May 18, 2009
Recognizing the 'pale blue dot' is to revere it
MELBOURNE — The 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant wrote: "Two things fill the heart with ever renewed and increasing awe and reverence, the more often and more steadily we meditate upon them: the starry firmament above and the moral law within."
COMMENTARY / World
Apr 19, 2009
Freedom of religion or freedom of speech?
PRINCETON N.J. — Last month, the United Nations Human Rights Council adopted a resolution condemning "defamation of religion" as a human rights violation. According to the text of the resolution, "Defamation of religion is a serious affront to human dignity" that leads to "a restriction on the...
COMMENTARY / World
Mar 19, 2009
A place for charity even in these tough times
PRINCETON, New Jersey — As I tour America promoting my new book, "The Life You Can Save: Acting Now to End World Poverty," I am often asked if this isn't the wrong time to call on affluent people to increase their effort to end poverty in other countries. I reply emphatically that it is not. There...
COMMENTARY / World
Feb 18, 2009
Are we ready for a new form of capitalism?
MELBOURNE — Is the global financial crisis an opportunity to forge a new form of capitalism based on sound values?
COMMENTARY / World
Jan 19, 2009
In vitro fertilization stands test of 30 years
MELBOURNE, Australia — Louise Brown, the first person to be conceived outside a human body, turned 30 last year. The birth of a "test-tube baby," as the headlines described in vitro fertilization, was highly controversial at the time.
COMMENTARY / World
Oct 29, 2008
Obama, McCain all but ignore poverty issue
PRINCETON — Barack Obama worked for three years as a community organizer on Chicago's blighted South Side, so he knows all about the real poverty that exists in America. He knows that in one of the world's richest nations, 37 million people live in poverty, a far higher proportion than in Europe's...

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