In the other area, nobody — CallMeDirac
by not killing anyone, one can watch what the dictator does and whether or not they end up killing more people than would have needed to have been sacrificed, — CallMeDirac
I'm curious how another consequentialist would personally resolve this issue — CallMeDirac
I'm curious how another consequentialist would personally resolve this issue, and whatever similar points have been handled by more competent philosophers. — CallMeDirac
Either kill 10,000 random people and 1 genocidal dictator or don't
(The dictator has the means and motive to commit a genocide of unknown proportion) — CallMeDirac
if the dictator is killed, there is no way to know if more were saved — CallMeDirac
I'm curious how another consequentialist would personally resolve this issue, and whatever similar points have been handled by more competent philosophers. — CallMeDirac
As I said, this is one of those absurd and therefore pointless scenarios, and some philosophers, like Peter Singer, would on this basis say that the question is not realistic and can be ignored. — Tom Storm
is it moral to make a decision without the ability to prove whether or not it had a net benefit, — CallMeDirac
or should one make a decision that, while possibly having a net loss, could be proven to have had a net benefit or loss; does the result of the provably beneficial or detrimental decision change whether or not the decision was the correct one to make based on the available information in the scenario? — CallMeDirac
Through a consequentialist lense, is it moral to make a decision without the ability to prove whether or not it had a net benefit — CallMeDirac
Whosoever kills a human being without (any reason like) man slaughter, or corruption on earth, it is as though he had killed all mankind ... — 5:32
You cannot predict if after the death of the dictator some other worse dictatorship could arise. — Babbeus
Here I have seen that there are different opinions about whether you should consider
actual consequences
predictable consequences
intended consequences
likely consequences — Babbeus
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