Moiety
New member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2008
- Messages
- 5,996
- MBTI Type
- ISFJ
What extra data are you talking about?
Quantity and quality. How many people, and what kind of people.
What extra data are you talking about?
You're looking at this the wrong way. You have to look out for your own interests. Which scenario is least likely to get you in trouble? That's the one you choose.But who is to value 1 life over 5 lives? Human life is intangible, and thus immeasurable.
I mean, let's say - hypothetically speaking - that the single person was a complete angel who would have gone on to win the Nobel Peace Prize, and the 5 people were actually serial killers. At that point, how can you measure the quality of a life over the quantity?
What if you pushed the fat person and that didn't stop the trolley? I think the certainty of the outcome has a major effect on peoples' feelings on this.Riiiiight. I'm gonna go into INTP mode here. In the first scenario I would switch tracks, unless I have some sort of logical reason to do otherwise at the moment. In the second scenario I would most likely not realize the fat person could stop the trolley simply because fat people usually can't stop trolleys. Even if this person could effectively stop the trolley, the thought wouldn't occur to me because due to past experiences and reasoning it would be very unlikely that this person could do it.
Scenario 1: You are a trolley conductor. As your trolley rounds a quick corner you see the unthinkable, 5 people have been tied on the tracks and you now find the breaks have been cut. However, you see that you can switch tracks... only to kill one person who otherwise would have been unharmed, but is also tied down. What do you do?
Scenario 2: You are a trolley conductor... again... who is now walking across a low lying bridge on which trolley tracks are running underneath. There are 5 people tied to the tracks as a trolley moves to end them! But wait, you see a particularly *wide* individual on the bridge.... one who could easily stop the trolley. Do you push that person over, stopping the trolley, or walk away saying the situation isn't your responsibility?
Did you "save" those five people? or did you kill one? the wording is incredibly important as you will soon see in the 100% identical Scenario 2.
Scenario 2: You are a trolley conductor... again... who is now walking across a low lying bridge on which trolley tracks are running underneath. There are 5 people tied to the tracks as a trolley moves to end them! But wait, you see a particularly *wide* individual on the bridge.... one who could easily stop the trolley. Do you push that person over, stopping the trolley, or walk away saying the situation isn't your responsibility?
I disagree. Knowing the serial killer he would hide himself in the 5 to avoid you killing him and thus the one person you killed would just be an innocent victim.In the 1st case, I'll trust my instincts and save 5 people with hitting one.
Rationalization: in your example, there's a higher chance that ONE person is actually a serial killer than that FIVE people are all serial killers. The consequence might be surprising, but you still made the right decision, because the "you've just hit an angel for five serial killers" is the least likely scenario, and you don't know the circumstances.
I disagree. Knowing the serial killer he would hide himself in the 5 to avoid you killing him and thus the one person you killed would just be an innocent victim.
Kill the five and avoid more deaths in the future.
So a serial killer would random tie himself up on a train track along with 4 people?
Assuming that if there was a chance that a serial killer was tied on the tracks it would be with the five.