全 6 件のコメント

[–]CaptainSomeGuy 4 ポイント5 ポイント  (0子コメント)

A man is walking with his wife and three children. His wife and he are holding hands while the children walk closely. A sink hole opens in the Earth.

The three children manage to grab a ledge left on the outside of the sink hole, however are too weak to hold on for more than a moment. The wife is dangling in the sink hole, safe because she was holding her husband's hand, which now is supporting her.

He can let go of the wife and lift his children to safety, or let the three of them die and keep the wife safe.

Wouldn't this be the same?

[–]captain_tucker 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Great read. I totally agree on the problem you put forward. There is really no moral issue when faced with an impossible force as both options are immoral and such a problem should not be up to one person to decide. It should be to the ones tied to the tracks, although with many variables this might not even be the best sollution. Overall i think it is a really shit example of a moral issue.

Your example of being stranded in the desert is something i have thought about myself, but in the senario of climbing Mount Everest. Where i climb with a couple of close friends of mine and a sherpa. Whos life is to be killed to save the others? Still a problem that in practice has way to many variables to be answered by saying "in theory i would...".

[–]ReallyNicoleΦ 2 ポイント3 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Like many folks who post about the trolley problem here, you misunderstand the point of the problem. Contemporary philosophers use trolley problems to expose problems with our intuitions about the moral difference between doing and allowing. Solutions to the trolley problem likely involve making sense of the differences between turning the trolley and harvesting organs involuntarily, not figuring out who's to blame.

[–]BurntPoptart 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (1子コメント)

I've considered the trolley problem a couple times now & I think the only moral option is to, if possible, ask the single person if he will sacrifice his life for the 5 other people. If he says no then you can't do anything, cause if you did you would be using that person as a means. If he says yes then you pulling the switch is morally okay because you are using him for the greater good of the 5 other people but with his permission. I may be wrong here I only recently started studying ethics, just my thoughts on the problem.

[–]captain_tucker 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

But what if he/she says no?

[–]Thejagwtf 0 ポイント1 ポイント  (0子コメント)

Another interesting way to think about this, is from a perspective of law (our professor brought this up during "Theory of Law"

  1. If you don't pull the lever - you are not responsible for killing anybody. - the person who tied the people there is to be prosecuted.

  2. you pull the lever, kill one person, and now are charged with murder, since, if you have not pulled it - he would have lived.

(also, the fact that if the 5 people were rapists and murderers; the one on the bottom a vietnam veteran.

There is a great video on this on youtube, about utilitarianism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvmz5E75ZIA

My answer to this dilamma, with a smile is always: http://i.imgur.com/RNsxq7t.jpg