Examlex
Travis Timmerman: A Reply to Singer
In "A Reply to Singer," Travis Timmerman examines Peter's Singer argument for the claim that we are morally obligated to donate most of our expendable income to aid organizations. Timmerman focuses on the second premise of Singer's argument (which states that if it is in our power to prevent something bad from happening, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable importance, we ought, morally, to do it) , and argues (i) that Singer fails to justify the truth of this premise and (ii) that there are positive reasons to reject it.
Singer's defense of his second premise rests on the famous "Drowning Child" thought experiment. According to Singer, our intuitive moral reaction to this thought experiment-that it is wrong not to save the life of a drowning child at the expense of new clothes-shows that we already accept the truth of his premise, at least implicitly. Timmerman disagrees. Because we rarely, if ever, find ourselves in the position Singer describes, our intuitive reaction to the "Drowning Child" case is informed, according to Timmerman, by the implicit assumption that it describes an anomalous, one-off event. Timmerman then points out that an intuitive conviction that it is wrong not to make a single, one-time monetary sacrifice to save the life of a child is not the same as, nor does it entail, the belief that we are obligated to spend our entire lives repeatedly making similar sacrifices, as Singer's premise requires of people in situations like ours. Singer's attempt to justify his second premise-by showing that our moral intuitions reveal we already accept it-therefore fails on Timmerman's view.
Timmerman next argues that if we consider a more relevant analogy ("Drowning Children") , in which a person is in a position to save many drowning children everyday over the course of her entire life at comparably insignificant personal cost, our moral intuitions actually conflict with Singer's second premise. Timmerman therefore concludes that not only do our commonsense moral intuitions fail to support Singer's second premise, they also reveal that people positively reject the truth of the premise.
-Timmerman agrees with Singer that:
Earnings
The amount of profit that a company produces during a specific period, indicating the financial performance and profitability.
Executive Change
The process or event of a change in the leadership or management team within an organization, which can have significant impacts on the strategic direction and performance of the company.
Bad Debt Expense
An expense account reflecting the estimated amount of receivables that are not expected to be collected due to customer defaults.
Loan Receivables
Claims or financial assets arising from money lent to borrowers by an entity.
Q1: The problem of temporal asymmetry was pointed
Q2: According to Thomson, if the bystander turns
Q6: According to Wolf-Devine, to suppose that a
Q7: In Smith v. Cain, a non-death penalty
Q12: Annas maintains that an action is right
Q12: In Sinnott-Armstrong's view, we can deny moral
Q19: What is the point of life, according
Q23: Texas's death penalty statute is an example
Q28: Harman argues that we have indirect observational
Q30: Nagel claims that we can be harmed:<br>A)