词条 | James Rachels |
释义 |
| | era = Contemporary philosophy | color = #B0C4DE | | caption = | signature = | | birth_date = 30 May 1941 | birth_place = Columbus, Georgia, United States of America | death_date = 5 September 2003 (aged 62) | death_place = Birmingham, Alabama, United States of America | school_tradition = Analytic philosophy | main_interests = Ethics, bioethics, animal rights | influences = Peter Singer | influenced = | notable_ideas = | }} James W. Rachels (May 30, 1941 – September 5, 2003) was an American philosopher who specialized in ethics and animal rights. BiographyRachels was born in Columbus, Georgia, and graduated from Mercer University in 1962. He received his Ph.D. in 1967 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, studying under Professors W. D. Falk and E. M. Adams. He taught at the University of Richmond, New York University, the University of Miami, Duke University and the University of Alabama at Birmingham, where he spent the last twenty-six years of his career. He married Carol Williams in 1962, and they had two sons, David and Stuart. He died of cancer in 2003 in Birmingham, Alabama. As a teenager, he won a national speech contest that enabled him to appear on American Bandstand and to meet John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon. He taught chess to his 9-year-old son, Stuart, who became the youngest chess master in American history at age 11.[1] At the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Rachels started in 1977 as Chair of Philosophy, became Dean of Arts and Humanities from 1978-1983, and then one year as Acting Vice-President for University College.[2] After retiring from administration at UAB, he was named University Professor and in 1992, the second Ireland Scholar.[3] Over the course of his career, Rachels wrote 6 books and 85 essays, edited 7 books and gave some 275 professional lectures. He argued for moral vegetarianism and animal rights, affirmative action, euthanasia, and the idea that parents should give as much fundamental moral consideration to another's children as they do to their own. Later in his career, Rachels realized that a lifetime of analysing specific moral issues had led him to adopt the general ethic of utilitarianism, according to which actions are assessed by their effects on both human and nonhuman happiness. WorksRachels' best-known work is The Elements of Moral Philosophy. It went to its sixth edition in 2009, having been revised by Rachels' son, Stuart Rachels. Among the subjects covered are ethical and simple subjectivism, emotivism, as well as ethical and psychological egoism. The text uses real-world examples to highlight points regarding complicated philosophical principles. Rachels had a history of using such examples. The publication in 1971 of his anthology, Moral Problems, marked a shift from teaching meta-ethics in American colleges to teaching concrete practical issues.[4] Moral Problems sold 100,000 copies over three editions. In 1975, Rachels wrote "Active and Passive Euthanasia", which originally appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine, and argued that the distinction so important in the law between killing and letting die (often based on the principle of double effect) has no rational basis. He argued that, if we allow passive euthanasia, we should also allow active euthanasia, because it is more humane, and because there is no significant moral difference between killing and allowing to die. The End of Life (1986), a moral treatise on life and death, broadened and deepened these ideas. Rachels wrote only a few works that were not directly focused on ethics. Created from Animals (1990) made the case that a Darwinian world-view has widespread philosophical implications, including drastic implications for our treatment of nonhuman entities. Can Ethics Provide Answers? (1997) was Rachels's first collection of papers. His second, The Legacy of Socrates, was published posthumously in 2007. Shortly before his death, he wrote Problems from Philosophy (2005), an introduction to philosophy. Bibliography
See also
References1. ^[https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1467-8519.2004.00375.x Accessed July 31, 2018. 2. ^[https://news.wbhm.org/feature/2003/remembering-james-rachels/ Accessed July 26, 2018.] 3. ^[https://www.uab.edu/institutionaleffectiveness/images/factbook/sections/80-84_FactsFigures2018_FacultyAwards-SpecialAppointments.pdf/ Accessed July 26, 2018.] 4. ^James Rachels. JboBio.com. Accessed April 19, 2012. External links{{wikiquote}}
15 : American non-fiction writers|American atheists|Atheist philosophers|University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill alumni|20th-century American philosophers|University of Alabama at Birmingham faculty|People from Columbus, Georgia|Duke University faculty|Mercer University alumni|Deaths from cancer in Alabama|1941 births|2003 deaths|Consequentialists|Utilitarians|Animal rights scholars |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。