OK, but let's make Trolley Car even more ridiculous by having 999 people tied on the track and 1000 in the car. If a person decides not to pull the switch, do you think they did something wrong? Would you condemn them? — RogueAI
In the light of the video above, where folks were placed in a situation that they really believed that was almost exactly the trolley problem, it is clearly a possible scenario, — unenlightened
one has to suspect that you have other reasons to hate it. — unenlightened
How often would that type of scenario actually happen in the real world. Answer - almost never. Given that, why has this become such a centerpiece of moral philosophy? — T Clark
Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend. — Philosophim
Sorry, I feel like I've waylaid your discussion. I know this wasn't the direction you wanted to take it. — T Clark
Because morality is extremely complicated, and you can start with a very simple example that's easy for others to comprehend. — Philosophim
Not on the ballot paper. Personally, I found it bad enough beheading a chicken. I do not believe either of us would even behead Putin or Trump. — unenlightened
Why? Morality is often thought of as, "What ought to be/happen." If you think the moral actions is that the lever should be pressed, then you think its moral to do so. Your guilt or emotions over the issue don't change whether something is moral or not. — Philosophim
I don't agree. Most philosophical thought experiments are silly. To have any value, a thought experiment should take into account the issues we see in the real world. It can still be simple, but it has to be real. — T Clark
I do not always do what I think I ought to do. — unenlightened
But one of the things I believe one ought not do is calculate the moral value of lives in the way the problem and the situation invites, because every life has infinite value. — unenlightened
But neither do i think it is right to make the opposite calculation of course, that one life is worth more than five. — unenlightened
and neither do I believe there is any more virtue in inaction than in action. — unenlightened
So I have nothing. — unenlightened
In other words, I am not a consequentialist. — unenlightened
My action killed one, but your inaction killed five. — unenlightened
Most philosophical thought experiments are silly. To have any value, a thought experiment should take into account the issues we see in the real world. It can still be simple, but it has to be real. — T Clark
What if you had to execute the 999 people yourself? — Apustimelogist
Yes, I hate the trolley problem. 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. — T Clark
The trolley problem is a thought experiment where you’re asked to either watch five people be killed or pull a lever so that only one person gets killed — Captain Homicide
All of the variables and so many more facts are important to understand before we can judge morality from this — Fire Ologist
then its a different question — Philosophim
Some people are just interested in morality just because they are interested in morality, regardless of practical application. — Apustimelogist
Some people are just interested in morality just because they are interested in morality, regardless of practical application.
— Apustimelogist
Ok, but I don't understand. Moral philosophy describes how we should treat other people. How can you talk about that without talking about how it works in the real world? — T Clark
How can you talk about that without talking about how it works in the real world? — T Clark
It’s an unreal scenario and doesn’t factor in intent, which is essential to defining an ethical act between people. — Fire Ologist
Morality has to do with intent.
So is the variable here inaction of watching people die, or affirmative action pulling the lever to kill one of them? Is this inaction versus action?
Or is the question whether it is better to kill one person or five people in this scenario? — Fire Ologist
then its a different question
— Philosophim
Well, what's your answer to the different question? — Apustimelogist
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