Your Moral Aptitude.
21I actually enjoy these problems, because they make me feel like a supervillain.
Moderator: Greg
Tom wrote:Heeby Jeeby wrote:Tom wrote:B_M_L wrote:The difference is that in option 2 you could jump yourself. You don't have to kill someone innocent to save the lives of others.
In this senario would you push fatty? Or give your own life.
Beat me to the punch.
You could try to land on the windshield of the train.
No fucking way. The situation described in the original post implies the 'large man' will stop the train. Linguistically you are lead to believe it is his large size that will stop the train not the engineer noticing. It's supposed to be a dilemma not a riddle.
If this is indeed the 'right' answer then it really is a good test...to find out what percentage of people are big fat fucking liars.
Go on someone be the first to say that they'd jump off on to the train to save the workers lives...
LIAR!
A. I'm a large guy.
B. I don't agree with your interpretation. I think the person needs to be large enough to make an impact to get his attention. You'd have to be like 4 tons to actually stop a train. A skinny fella, the train would run over without noticing. A Man with form would make more of a thud.
emmanuelle cunt wrote:I don't think it is the same scenario, as version B involves actively killing a man, while version A has the option of not doing anything at all. End result would be the same, but the scenario is not.
myself wrote:(no links to the recent c/nc thread)
jimmy spako wrote:is it wrong if i trick a melon into fucking me by pretending to be rich?
emmanuelle cunt wrote:Thomas Aquinas would say that it is ethical not to take any action in both scenario as lesser evil is never-ever a suitable tactic for a Christan. … Kant would opt for not doing a thing as you can't take the responsibility for what happens in the future (so, you don't KNOW people are going to be run over, you only assume so, but you are taking actions to kill a man because of your assumtions).
B_M_L wrote:emmanuelle cunt wrote:Thomas Aquinas would say that it is ethical not to take any action in both scenario as lesser evil is never-ever a suitable tactic for a Christan. … Kant would opt for not doing a thing as you can't take the responsibility for what happens in the future (so, you don't KNOW people are going to be run over, you only assume so, but you are taking actions to kill a man because of your assumtions).
Both are wrong/immoral because they take the view that not participating is ‘not acting’ and therefore bearing moral responsibility. In fact not participating or remaining inactive in the incident is actually an action – negatively influencing the outcome.
While we have no way of knowing with certainty the outcome of a scenario, our experience and judgement allows us to understand the likely outcome.
If I witness an immoral act, but choose not to prevent it from occurring then this action is as immoral as if I participated.
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