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2010-04-15
, 19:58
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Posts: 889 |
Thanked: 537 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ scotland
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#72
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How about if we look for women and children among the five?
And then we do a bit of socio-economic profiling based on their clothing and looks?
Oh, this is good too:
http://www.theonion.com/articles/i-w...an-into,17246/
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2010-04-15
, 20:15
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Posts: 94 |
Thanked: 319 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ Barcelona, Spain
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#73
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yes i definately find your reasoning behind it more valid (not that anyones reasons are not valid but you know what i mean!) and more what the original question is trying to evoke on a moral level. yet in this instance you are sacrificing the 4 extra lives based on semantics and how you will personally feel about it later. is that the morally right thing to do?
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2010-04-15
, 20:16
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Posts: 889 |
Thanked: 537 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ scotland
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#74
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festivalnut, the point is that I am not deciding that one life is better than another, nor am I deciding that five is better than one. The information needed for any meaningful calculus is simply not there in the original pop-psychology conundrum.
The mention of Hitler was part of highlighting that you simply do not truthfully know that saving the five is 'better' than saving the one. Ultimately, the only remaining argument (save the five because there's more of them) reduces to an example of mob rule - that simple weight of numbers denotes righteousness. A horrible fallacy, and one that has enabled much historical evil.
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2010-04-15
, 20:24
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Posts: 540 |
Thanked: 288 times |
Joined on Sep 2009
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#75
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2010-04-15
, 20:33
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Posts: 3,319 |
Thanked: 5,610 times |
Joined on Aug 2008
@ Finland
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#76
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The mention of Hitler was part of highlighting that you simply do not truthfully know that saving the five is 'better' than saving the one. Ultimately, the only remaining argument (save the five because there's more of them) reduces to an example of mob rule - that simple weight of numbers denotes righteousness. A horrible fallacy, and one that has enabled much historical evil.
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2010-04-16
, 00:03
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Posts: 124 |
Thanked: 213 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#77
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2010-04-16
, 00:06
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Posts: 604 |
Thanked: 108 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ Phoenix, WA
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#78
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from mylot.com
I was taking a philosophy class and our teacher asked us these three scenarios.
1: You are standing by the switch near a train track. The train is coming and the brakes are broken. The train is headed on a path where it will run over five people who are tied to the tracks, killing them. If you pull the switch, the train will switch direction and go on a track where it will kill 1 person who is tied to the tracks, but if you don't pull it he will be safe. You have no time to untie anyone. What do you do?
2: You are standing on a bridge over a train track. The train is coming, the brakes are broken, and there are 5 people tied to the tracks. There is a fat man on the bridge. This man is fat enough that if you pushed him, he would stop the train from running over the 5 people, but he would be killed. Do you push him?
3: Same situation as #2, but the fat man is standing on a trapdoor. You are standing by a lever that will open the trapdoor, he will fall onto the tracks, stop the train from running over the five people, and be killed. Do you pull it?
What would you do?
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2010-04-16
, 02:10
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Posts: 336 |
Thanked: 610 times |
Joined on Apr 2008
@ France
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#79
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from mylot.com
I was taking a philosophy class and our teacher asked us these three scenarios.
1: You are standing by the switch near a train track. The train is coming and the brakes are broken. The train is headed on a path where it will run over five people who are tied to the tracks, killing them. If you pull the switch, the train will switch direction and go on a track where it will kill 1 person who is tied to the tracks, but if you don't pull it he will be safe. You have no time to untie anyone. What do you do?
2: You are standing on a bridge over a train track. The train is coming, the brakes are broken, and there are 5 people tied to the tracks. There is a fat man on the bridge. This man is fat enough that if you pushed him, he would stop the train from running over the 5 people, but he would be killed. Do you push him?
3: Same situation as #2, but the fat man is standing on a trapdoor. You are standing by a lever that will open the trapdoor, he will fall onto the tracks, stop the train from running over the five people, and be killed. Do you pull it?
What would you do?
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2010-04-16
, 02:48
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Posts: 215 |
Thanked: 159 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#80
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Tags |
maemo, morality, philosophy |
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The mention of Hitler was part of highlighting that you simply do not truthfully know that saving the five is 'better' than saving the one. Ultimately, the only remaining argument (save the five because there's more of them) reduces to an example of mob rule - that simple weight of numbers denotes righteousness. A horrible fallacy, and one that has enabled much historical evil.
Last edited by Dak; 2010-04-15 at 20:12.