This paper questions Geographers debates about 'caring at a distance' and the 'geographies of responsibility', focussing on the treatment of the theme of partiality in ethics and justice. Debates in Geography often present partial commitments as morally or politically problematic on the grounds that they prioritize self-interest, exclusionary, and geographically restricted ways of relating to others. We outline how debates about caring at a distance and the geographies of responsibility frame partiality as a problem to be overcome. We argue that Geography's engagements with moral philosophy are premised on faulty assumptions about the sorts of influences people are liable to act upon (one's that privilege causal knowledge as the primary mot...