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 disagrees with Singer that:
Companies
Entities engaged in commercial, industrial, or professional activities with the goal of generating profits.
Line of Credit
A flexible loan from a bank or financial institution that allows a borrower to draw funds up to a specified limit at any time, with interest typically charged only on the amount drawn.
Specific Length
A term that might refer to the fixed duration or measure of something, but without more context, its application is too broad to define precisely here.
JIT Systems
Just-In-Time systems refer to an inventory management strategy aimed at increasing efficiency and reducing waste by receiving goods only as they are needed in the production process.
Q3: Held claims that although many philosophers have
Q4: The Court began its opinion addressing the
Q10: According to Anscombe, someone who thinks it
Q12: Regan raises concerns about factory farms because:<br>A)
Q12: According to Hanson, white men have not
Q12: Are there any factors contributing to on-campus
Q17: Shue considers three counterarguments to the first
Q17: According to Annas, moral methodology should be
Q19: Academic training and an allegiance to a
Q25: Sartre claims that we have some obligations