If of course its simply a matter of numbers, the answer is obvious. — Philosophim
And yet doctors are not permitted to sacrifice one person to save five lives with organ transplants. — unenlightened
That is a different scenario. — Philosophim
The sameness in the scenario is that one acts to deliberately kill one person not in danger, in order to save 5 people who would otherwise die. — unenlightened
My answer is to the specific scenario they gave. Of course the answer is different with a different scenario. — Philosophim
Then the arithmetic is not crucial, and your justification based on the arithmetic is not valid. — unenlightened
Please explain how the arithmetic is not crucial — Philosophim
If there is a principle that it is right to act to kill 1 to save 5, the principle should apply to both scenarios. — unenlightened
when is it morally acceptable to choose non-interference? — Tzeentch
Here's... as close as possible... to a real world test. Just to check how people would actually react rather than believe they would. — Christoffer
when is it morally acceptable to choose non-interference?
— Tzeentch
When there's insufficient knowledge of the outcome, or of the moving parts of a situation. — Christoffer
The situation adds an extra variable of expertise involved. The participants didn't fully understand the situation, and thought hitting the lever might make things worse. Makes sense. If I'm in a strange room with equipment that I'm unfamiliar with, and I know there are people who normally operate this equipment and are possibly nearby, I'm not going to switch the switch. — Philosophim
I think this problem is morally irrelevant. This is a game, where the game master has constrained your moral agency to a binary choice of bad outcomes. — Benkei
I'm not declaring a principle. I'm declaring, "In X scenario, this is the correct answer" — Philosophim
The one over the five people every time. — Philosophim
So to be clear, there's a lever for you to pull or not to pull. Five nameless vs 1 nameless, the track is currently set to kill five nameless humans. What do you find moral in this specific and unaltered situation and why? — Philosophim
The one over the five people every time. — Philosophim
I think this problem is morally irrelevant. — Benkei
As is usually the case, in for instance an election, will you vote for the Dispicables or the Incompetents? — unenlightened
What about triage situations and organ shortages? If you have ten people who need an organ and only one organ, who gets it? Who lives and who dies? Do you save Mickey Mantle or a kid? — RogueAI
I'm not declaring a principle. I'm declaring, "In X scenario, this is the correct answer"
— Philosophim
The one over the five people every time.
— Philosophim
This is what I mean by a principle. but it turns out that you don't think it's every time, but only this specific time. — unenlightened
And the only lesson I can learn, in that case, is to ask Philosophim whenever there's a moral dilemma, because he will know the correct answer, but will not know why it is correct. That is more of a cult than a philosophy. — unenlightened
I don't know what i would do, quite possibly freeze like most of the people in the video. But if I didn't freeze, I would pull the lever. But I would feel guilty about it, because I do not believe it is moral to do so. I believe it is the comfortable thing to do. — unenlightened
It's one of those things that gives philosophy a bad name. It's nothing like any person will ever have to face in the real world. I wasn't going to say anything and disrupt the discussion, but you gave me an opening. — T Clark
I vote revolution. Off with their heads. — Benkei
The one over the five people every time.
— Philosophim
Yes, but what about one over two. I pull the switch if it's five to one, but I'm not sure what I would do if there are only two people on the car. Or what about saving ten people at the cost of nine? Is that obvious? — RogueAI
To me, yes. Because the problem as presented is a math problem, and nothing more. We don't know the value of the people on the tracks. So at that point we save the greatest number of lives. — Philosophim
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