Fiona Woollard
Doing harm seems much harder to justify than merely
allowing harm. If a boulder is rushing towards Bob, you may refuse to save
Bob's life by driving your car into the path of the boulder if doing so would
cost you your own life. You may not push the boulder towards Bob to save your
own life. This principle—the Doctrine of Doing and Allowing—requires defence.
Does the distinction between doing and allowing fall apart under scrutiny? When
lives are at stake, how can it matter whether harm is done or allowed? Drawing
on detailed analysis of the distinction between doing and allowing, Fiona
Woollard argues that the Doctrine of Doing and Allowing is best understood as a
principle that protects us from harmful imposition. Such protection against
imposition is necessary for morality to recognize anything as genuinely
belonging to a person, even that person's own body. As morality must recognize
each person's body as belonging to her, the Doctrine of Doing and Allowing
should be accepted. Woollard defends a moderate account of our obligations to
aid, tackling arguments by Peter Singer and Peter Unger that we must give most
of our money away and arguments from Robert Nozick that obligations to aid are
incompatible with self-ownership.