Drowning the Shallow Pond Analogy: A Critique of Garrett Cullity's Attempt to Rescue it

19 Pages Posted: 2 Aug 2014

See all articles by Uwe Steinhoff

Uwe Steinhoff

The University of Hong Kong - Department of Politics and Public Administration

Date Written: December 18, 2010

Abstract

Garrett Cullity concedes that saving a drowning child from a shallow pond at little cost to oneself is not actually analogous to giving money to a poverty relief organization like Oxfam. The question then arises whether this objection is fatal to Peters Singer’s argument for a duty of assistance or whether it can be saved anyway. Cullity argues that not saving the drowning child and not giving money to organizations like Oxfam are still morally analogous, that is, not giving money to organizations like Oxfam is morally nearly as bad as letting the child drown. I argue that Cullity’s two arguments for this conclusion, an argument from “transitivity” and an argument from collective responsibility, fail.

Keywords: collective responsibility, Garrett Cullity, duty of assistance, shallow pond analogy, Peter Singer

Suggested Citation

Steinhoff, Uwe, Drowning the Shallow Pond Analogy: A Critique of Garrett Cullity's Attempt to Rescue it (December 18, 2010). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2474979 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2474979

Uwe Steinhoff (Contact Author)

The University of Hong Kong - Department of Politics and Public Administration ( email )

Pokfulam Road
Centennial Campus
Hong Kong, Pokfulam HK
Hong Kong

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