If there is a principle that it is right to act to kill 1 to save 5, the principle should apply to both scenarios. Since it doesn't apply to both scenarios, there must be another principle that overrides the numbers principle that makes the difference. This is the idea of doing thought experiments, that you test how you justify things. — unenlightened
Neither. IMHO, wrong question as I point out (above):In THIS limited situation, what is more moral? — Philosophim
How would you respond to the trolley problem?
where there are no other options. — Philosophim
I am not sure that I agree. For simple, totalizing moral theories, such as classical utilitarianism, it is very much relevant (perhaps as a reductio).
In other cases it depends on degree of similarity and how that factors into your moral thinking. Most of us at least contemplate public policies. Public policies not infrequently involve life-and-death decisions. Do we do this and save this many lives, or do we do that and save that many, or do we do nothing? How about emergency room or field hospital triage? Battlefield decisions? Relatively few people are directly involved in those, but it's not a negligible number. — SophistiCat
there's much better ethical considerations to be had than which 'choice' one would make. The focus ought be upon how we ever got to that point to start with... — creativesoul
This ignores what he's actually said. In the OG scenario, you have no idea about differential value. You couldn't employ such a principle.
IN the subsequent, it is available to you. Unless i've missed something fundamentally esoteric about hte cases, this seems obvious. — AmadeusD
I think if a decision MUST BE made between "watching 5+" or "causing 1" human death by train then it would have to be, or shall I say, OUGHT TO BE judged in the time available...Like, perhaps it appears to be friends or a family dying together if you decide to watch 5+ die instead of CAUSE one to die alone instead. I think, sick as it is, that I might watch that instead of assisting or aiding by hand to kill just one. I am picturing the begging person. I am picturing the begging group. I think the group begging wouldnt bother me like hearing just one life beg for help. I think it would be harder for me personally to pull the lever and I think I do not consider this choice "saving lives"...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.
In this hypothetical scenario which choice would you make?
For those who would let the five people die by not pulling the lever to kill one person is there a minimum number of people on the track that would make you choose to kill the one person?
50? 100? 1,000? 10,000?
What is your reasoning? — Captain Homicide
All of us are after all bystanders in countless numbers of situations which are just begging for a hero. — Tzeentch
I can't help it if I'm lucky. — Bob Dylan
Apparently there exists a moral obligation to save people from dying, even if it requires the murder of bystanders, but this obligation is limited by distance and now seemingly also does not include acts that exceed the effort of a lever pull. — Tzeentch
No, I'm on the other side of the lever pulling in theory, [...] — unenlightened
I can respond to something on the tv by various means, usually involving my bank account so as to pay someone else to do something. — unenlightened
But if I did that too often I'd have to sell the tv and then I wouldn't even have that option. — unenlightened
Then the arithmetic is not crucial, and your justification based on the arithmetic is not valid. — unenlightened
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.