What I find particularly interesting is the notion that not getting involved is equated to commiting the act. — Tzeentch
The train will follow its own course, and the outcome isn't determined by my selection of a track but by the natural progression of events. — EyE
If you want to frame this in mathematical terms, you must recognize that this is not a simple equation of choosing between 1 and 5 lives. The probabilities and ethical weight aren't balanced, and I’m not the one who sets those outcomes in motion. — EyE
ultimately the decision you are making is whether you would sacrifice 1 life to save 5. That's not to say if there wasn't someone on that second track I wouldn't pull the lever because of "fate" haha, but at least then I can entertain the choice. — EyE
Death can come at anytime and if someone wants to invoke it they have the agency to, but not in this situation. So I guess by switching that track I honour their ability to choose. — EyE
The lone person's choice over when and where they want to die could lead to five other people losing that choice. — ToothyMaw
their isn't 6 choices — EyE
Does the choice of the lone person not to die potentially have less value than *six combined? — ToothyMaw
When you sacrifice someone it means to kill them when they weren't predestined to die. You seem to look at this in a "I could have killed you if I wanted to but I didn't therefore I saved you" kinda of way. Which is unethical to say the least :lol: — EyE
*It would be six choices preserved if the lone person decided not to redirect the trolley because by definition, they would be honoring their own choice to die when they want, and this choice would allow the five on the other track to still choose when and where they die. — ToothyMaw
why are you choosing to pull the lever? 6 as a value is what I was referring to when I said "6 choices" your including the 1 person on the other track when you shouldn't be, they are not part of the problem. — EyE
Anyway morals and ethics are derived from truth (logic) you can't come to your own conclusion without following it. — EyE
If my logic is correct as you say, then if the lone person does not pull the lever, then the ability for six people to choose how they die is preserved or honored. I'm saying that the lone person on one of the tracks is the one pulling the lever, not me, to potentially save themselves, at the cost of the other five people on the other track. I should have made that clearer when I proposed the modified thought experiment. — ToothyMaw
First, the trolley maintainance people are responsible for the outcome, not the bystander who happens to be near the lever. — LuckyR
Second, at the time the lever is pulled (or not pulled) the exact consequences of action or inaction is not known with certainty by the bystander. — LuckyR
Thus the answer is "it doesn't matter", do whatever strikes you in the moment, you're not open to logical criticism either way. — LuckyR
I think it would be wrong to throw the switch. We should not sacrifice people.
Anyone is free to sacrifice themself. Fine if the one says, "Throw the switch! Better I die so many can be saved!" — Patterner
If doing nothing means everyone dies, and throwing the switch means only he dies, then saving everyone but him isn't sacrificing him. His fate want changed.What if we raise the stakes to ridiculous levels where the fate of the world rests on running over the guy on the tracks? — RogueAI
No.I think it would be wrong to throw the switch. We should not sacrifice people.
— Patterner
Are you against conscription in all cases? — ToothyMaw
Yeah, I realized that we must have been talking about two different things. Oof. — ToothyMaw
So going back to the original problem, why are you choosing to pull the lever? 6 as a value is what I was referring to when I said "6 choices" your including the 1 person on the other track when you shouldn't be, they are not part of the problem. Just because they've come up in the conversation it doesn't change the reality of it. Anyway morals and ethics are derived from truth (logic) you can't come to your own conclusion without following it. — EyE
Let's suppose aliens come down and tell us that we're all going to wiped out unless we give the aliens any death row convict. If we do that, we'll all live. If we don't, we'll all die, except the death row convict. What should we do? — RogueAI
We should fight the aliens to the death. Not only because it's wrong to sacrifice people (Did we learn nothing from Omelas?), but also because we would be their bitches from them on. — Patterner
maybe they are doing this from a light-year away, but we know they can back up their threat, then we die as humans. — Patterner
I think it would be wrong to throw the switch. We should not sacrifice people.
— Patterner
Are you against conscription in all cases?
— ToothyMaw
No.
We live in societies, with laws. The point of it all is to ensure our rights and freedom, and make our lives better. Not take our freedom, quality of life, or our very lives.
But. Since we want to live in these societies, it can't always go the way we want. There are also responsibilities. As they say, freedom isn't free. There are times when we have to do what we have to do for the society. Regardless of the risk. — Patterner
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