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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
    The argument from identification supports extending conce... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→The argument from identification can justify charity towards strangers in non-emergency situations, including those who are permanently disabled and unable to care for themselves

    The argument from identification supports extending concern beyond emergencies

    ConsequentialismMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityConsequentialism

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    Rights & Liberty1 linked

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    Permanently disabled individuals who cannot care for themselves are a class of s...The argument from identification can justify charity towards strangers in non-em...

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    The argument from identification can justify charity towards strangers...80%To escape the regress generated by asking what conditions govern each ...69%The argument is grounded in the human capacity to rapidly evaluate com...68%It is permissible to infer that a feature which mattered in one case m...68%

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    SEP: ayn-rand
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    At any rate, the argument from identification can also be used to justify charity towards strangers in non-emergency situations, for example, towards those who are permanently disabled and unable to care for themselves (Badhwar forthcoming). Rand concedes as much in “What is Capitalism?” (1965) where she argues that people who are unable to work must rely on voluntary charity, thus implying that it is proper for those who can afford it to support strangers in non-emergency situations. And indeed

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