The canonical case that psychologists, philosophers, and policy analysts reflect upon in considering how and why individuals and collective decision makers allocate resources that diminish the number of preventable death in seemingly irrational ways is the Baby Jessica case. The simple behavioral observation we make is that there was a generous, spontaneous outpouring of aid to save Baby Jessica, a young child trapped in a well. At the same time, those people who sent checks and cash to save the trapped child seem to be willing to expend far fewer resources to preventsuch accidents or other fatalities. The case raises at least two quite distinct descriptive and normative issues that are often conflated, though each is worth independent at...
For years, discussions about the best way to combat the HIV/AIDS pandemic have pitted proponents of ...
This chapter argues that complaints against suffering harm should be discounted by the chance that s...
In considering moral dilemmas, people often judge the acceptability of exchanging individuals’ inter...
The canonical case that psychologists, philosophers, and policy analysts reflect upon in considering...
In the distribution of resources, persons must be respected, or so many philosophers contend. Unfort...
Each year, millions of children die from starvation, malnutrition or easily-treatable illnesses. UNI...
Questioning the ethical reasoning behind ways of attributing value to lives impacts philosophical di...
Many philosophers think that we should use a lottery to decide who gets a good to which two persons ...
guished between ‘‘identified lives’ ’ and ‘‘statistical lives.’ ’ Identified lives are the miners tr...
Jonsen coined the term `Rule of Rescue' in 1986 to describe the imperative people feel to rescue ide...
Discussion of the “problem of numbers” in morality has focused almost exclusively on the moral signi...
When life-saving medical resources are scarce and not everyone can be saved, is the only relevant go...
To your left, three strangers are drowning. To your right, one other stranger is drowning. You can e...
The rule of rescue holds that special weight should be given to protecting the lives of assignable i...
Thirty years of debate have passed since the term Rule of Rescue has been introduced into medical et...
For years, discussions about the best way to combat the HIV/AIDS pandemic have pitted proponents of ...
This chapter argues that complaints against suffering harm should be discounted by the chance that s...
In considering moral dilemmas, people often judge the acceptability of exchanging individuals’ inter...
The canonical case that psychologists, philosophers, and policy analysts reflect upon in considering...
In the distribution of resources, persons must be respected, or so many philosophers contend. Unfort...
Each year, millions of children die from starvation, malnutrition or easily-treatable illnesses. UNI...
Questioning the ethical reasoning behind ways of attributing value to lives impacts philosophical di...
Many philosophers think that we should use a lottery to decide who gets a good to which two persons ...
guished between ‘‘identified lives’ ’ and ‘‘statistical lives.’ ’ Identified lives are the miners tr...
Jonsen coined the term `Rule of Rescue' in 1986 to describe the imperative people feel to rescue ide...
Discussion of the “problem of numbers” in morality has focused almost exclusively on the moral signi...
When life-saving medical resources are scarce and not everyone can be saved, is the only relevant go...
To your left, three strangers are drowning. To your right, one other stranger is drowning. You can e...
The rule of rescue holds that special weight should be given to protecting the lives of assignable i...
Thirty years of debate have passed since the term Rule of Rescue has been introduced into medical et...
For years, discussions about the best way to combat the HIV/AIDS pandemic have pitted proponents of ...
This chapter argues that complaints against suffering harm should be discounted by the chance that s...
In considering moral dilemmas, people often judge the acceptability of exchanging individuals’ inter...