would start with the worst criminals and the terminally ill. — DingoJones
Yes well it is a messy scenario, thats the point. You are not going to get 1 billion volunteers, so someone is going to have to have their personal autonomy violated or there will be no more humans at all.
Its bound to not be “fair”, its not a fair scenario. Again, that is the point...to explore a difficult decision, not a childishly simple one like “is it wrong to kill a billion people?”. Most of is have that one figured out already don’t you think? — DingoJones
What's scary are people who are able to answer this... — Anaxagoras
What is the point of mocking the thought experiment? — DingoJones
What it makes me feel is regret at the Hollywoodisation of ethics. Rather than deliberate over real problems that actually occur in our world, people make up sci-fi scenarios that have nothing to do with real ethics. The blithe amusement with which people have reacted is entirely appropriate.I’m more interested in what the process makes you think about and feel like. Not really interested in an actual reply — I like sushi
Ya, and? Are you saying forcing people to do something is never the answer? Forcing a population to do something is never the answer?
Or are you worried the practice will stick after the extinction of the human race is avoided? — DingoJones
Isnt that just a refusal to answer the question? In the scenario, every human being in world dies as you stand on a podium saying “do nothing, democratic method and reductio ad absurdum” before you yourself die. — DingoJones
No, whats scary is when someone wastes time trying to hold a moral high ground when in this scenario the alternative to finding an answer for the 1 billion is that ALL humans die. — DingoJones
Not necessarily. I would simply recuse myself due to bias. Hopefully, everyone would do that. Those that don't perhaps would qualify for extermination. — Wallows
If any forum member has seen a human take their last breath especially someone they love they would know how it feels to watch someone die. — Anaxagoras
I agree. The difference between those health policy decisions and the sci-fi thought experiments is context. Everything depends on context, so a thought experiment that just asks if one would kill a billion people to save the rest of the human race from extinction is just silly.we do make these kinds of choices all the time. For example when we invest money in cancer research over drug rehabilitation. I personally think it's important to think about whom we save and why and if our reasons for doing so are faulty. — NKBJ
Everything depends on context, so a thought experiment that just asks if one would kill a billion people to save the rest of the human race from extinction is just silly. — andrewk
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.