T
Thing
Guest
- I understand, and I thought about that but even in the original non-loop case, he’s not at risk if the trolley just stays on course.
- Also, are you saying that it would not be moral to accept the death of one person if millions were spared? I understand that this is ugly because of our instinct that we have no right to make such a decision. However, considering the Golden Rule and in a society where everyone had given implicit permission to sacrifice them in such caes, then I think that in Scenario 3 it would be moral to decide about the sacrifice. In a society where such permission is not implicit, I still think that one must save as many as possible and I know it’s uncomfortable.
- The trolly can take two courses. The fatman is tied to one and is at risk, he is part of the experimant
- If the one mans death would actually save millions then that one man would, like the fatman, be part of the experiment, he would be at risk; and to sacrifice him would be the lesser of two evils, as in the first and second examples.
If the one man was safe though, then his sacrifice would not be part of the experiment, and you could not chose to sacrifice him.