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o_mlly
Guest
Could you explain what “character of means” means?o mlly,
I think you’ll forgive BetterAve for taking you to task over your phrasing because I don’t think you were as clear the first time around that you were talking about morally indifferent objects of an act, i.e. acts which therefore have to take their moral quality from the intention.
Could we backtrack for a moment? When I was speaking of intermediate ends what I was trying to get at (perhaps in clumsy manner) was that one chooses that which has a character of a means.
Since DE is an analytical tool, perhaps it would clarify the points you make if you compare the different scenarios using the 4 principles:If we look at the two trolley problems side by side there is a difference in them, right? In the first the driver switches the track from a track with 5 persons to 1 person. The fact that there is 1 person on that second track is incidental to the fact that there are not 5 people under the trolley.
But, in the second problem, the driver switches his route to hit the fat man first before hitting the 5 persons. The fact that he hits the fat man first isn’t incidental to the fact that there are not 5 people under the trolley – its cause and effect.
In the first, the fat man getting hit is foreseen and permitted, but it isn’t willed (you’d be happy if he jumped off the track at the last moment). But in the second, the fat man getting hit is foreseen and willed (your objective would be frustrated were he to jump off the track at the last moment).
Any thoughts on the differences between the two?
VC
- The act must be good or indifferent.
Scenario 1 What is the Act? Flip a switch. Is it morally good, indifferent or evil? Indifferent.
Scenario 2 What is the Act? Flip a switch. Is it morally good, indifferent or evil? Indifferent. - The good effect must be intended.
Scenario 1 What is the Intention? Save 5 lives.
Scenario 2 What is the Intention? Save 5 lives. - The good effect may not proceed from the bad effect.
Scenario 1 Do the five lives saved proceed from the death of the one? No. Their lives are saved because the trolley does not run over them.
Scenario 2 Do the five lives saved proceed from the death of the one? No. Their lives are saved because the trolley does not run over them.
Scenario 1? Yes.
Scenario 2? Yes.
In both scenarios, the bad effect, most probaly hitting and probably killing the fat man, is foreseen but not willed; only accepted.
It is the 3rd principle that muddies the clarity of the morality of flipping the switch. I hope if put in the trolley operator’s position, that I have the grace to do God’s will.