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oapen-20.500.12657-636482023-06-22T04:46:19Z The Rules of Rescue Pummer, Theron Ohlin, Peter beneficence, preventing harm, requiring reason, permission, personal sacrifice, aggregation, all or nothing, praiseworthiness, distant stranger, effective altruism bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HP Philosophy::HPQ Ethics & moral philosophy This is a book about duties to help others. When does one have to sacrifice life and limb, time and money, to prevent harm to others? When must one save more people rather than fewer? These questions arise in emergencies involving nearby strangers who are drowning or trapped in burning buildings. But they also arise in everyday life, in which one has constant opportunities to give time or money to help distant strangers in need of food, shelter, or medical care. With the resources available, one can provide more help or less. This book argues that it is often wrong to provide less help rather than more, even when the personal sacrifice involved makes it permissible not to help at all. It shows that helping distant strangers by donating or volunteering is morally more like rescuing nearby strangers than most of us realize. The ubiquity of opportunities to help others threatens to make morality extremely demanding, and the book argues that it is only thanks to adequate permissions grounded in considerations of cost and autonomy that one may pursue one’s own plans and projects. It concludes that many are required to provide no less help over their lives than they would have done if they were effective altruists. 2023-06-21T12:56:24Z 2023-06-21T12:56:24Z 2023 book https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/63648 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-rules-of-rescue-9780190884147 Oxford University Press 10.1093/oso/9780190884147.001.0001 10.1093/oso/9780190884147.001.0001 b9501915-cdee-4f2a-8030-9c0b187854b2 4fe76352-d058-4cc5-88a7-b032626ff29b 264 University of St Andrews open access
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OAPEN
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English
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description |
This is a book about duties to help others. When does one have to sacrifice life and limb, time and money, to prevent harm to others? When must one save more people rather than fewer? These questions arise in emergencies involving nearby strangers who are drowning or trapped in burning buildings. But they also arise in everyday life, in which one has constant opportunities to give time or money to help distant strangers in need of food, shelter, or medical care. With the resources available, one can provide more help or less. This book argues that it is often wrong to provide less help rather than more, even when the personal sacrifice involved makes it permissible not to help at all. It shows that helping distant strangers by donating or volunteering is morally more like rescuing nearby strangers than most of us realize. The ubiquity of opportunities to help others threatens to make morality extremely demanding, and the book argues that it is only thanks to adequate permissions grounded in considerations of cost and autonomy that one may pursue one’s own plans and projects. It concludes that many are required to provide no less help over their lives than they would have done if they were effective altruists.
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Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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spellingShingle |
Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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title_short |
Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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title_full |
Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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title_fullStr |
Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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Pummer_The Rules of Rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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pummer_the rules of rescue_9780190884147.pdf
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publisher |
Oxford University Press
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publishDate |
2023
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url |
https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-rules-of-rescue-9780190884147
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1771297576873623552
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