Is bravery - for example risking or giving one's life to save a stranger's,

Is bravery - for example risking or giving one's life to save a stranger's,

Is bravery - for example risking or giving one's life to save a stranger's, while one has loved-ones and dependents - laudable, or even defensible, under any theories of ethics? There are many examples of people giving up their lives - and by consequence severely afflicting those of their immediate family - through acts of self-sacrifice. Are these acts justifiable? Sometimes the risks of this kind of uncalculating bravery are so great, it seems that no reasonable person would do it, yet some do, and most people (me included) praises them for it - is this reasonable?

Read another response by Charles Taliaferro
Read another response about Ethics
Print