The trolley problem:
would you kill one person to save many others?
A decades-old thought experiment reveals our
inconsistent moral intuitions. What would you do?
In the 2015 British thriller Eye in the Sky, a
military team locates a terrorist cell preparing an attack expected to kill
hundreds. They command a drone that can drop a bomb on the terrorists, preventing their attack. As
the team readies the bomb, their cameras spy a little girl selling bread within
the blast radius.
Should they go through
with their mission – killing the girl in order to prevent the deaths of many
others?
This modern-day moral dilemma has its roots in
a classic philosophical thought experiment known as the trolley problem.
Introduced in 1967 by Philippa Foot, the trolley problem illuminates the
landscape of moral intuitions – the peculiar and sometimes surprising patterns
of how we divide right from wrong.
Try it at home
Consider one version of the trolley problem:
A runaway
trolley is heading down
the tracks toward five workers who will all be killed if the trolley proceeds on its present
course. Adam is standing next to a large switch that can divert the trolley onto a different track. The
only way to save the lives of the five workers is to divert the trolley onto
another track that only has one worker on it. If Adam diverts the trolley onto
the other track, this one worker will die, but the other five workers will be
saved.
Should Adam flip the switch, killing the one
worker but saving the other five? Write down your answer.
Now consider a slightly different version:
A runaway trolley is heading down the tracks toward five workers who
will all be killed if the trolley proceeds on its present course. Adam is on a footbridge over the
tracks, in between the approaching trolley and the five workers. Next to him on
this footbridge is a stranger who happens to be very large. The only way to
save the lives of the five workers is to push this stranger off the footbridge
and onto the tracks below where his large body will stop the trolley. The
stranger will die if Adam does this, but the five workers will be saved.
Should Adam push the stranger off the
footbridge, killing him but saving the five workers?
Did you give the same answer to the first and
second versions – or different ones? (…)
Molly Crockett Mon
12 Dec 2016 16.49 GMT
Courtesy of Guardian
News & Media Ltd.
Blast: Detonation
Runaway: Out of control
Footbridge: A
footbridge (also a pedestrian bridge, pedestrian overpass, or pedestrian
overcrossing) is a bridge designed solely for pedestrians.
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