Can Morality Survive in a Life or Death Dilemma?

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In summary, there are two boats with explosives and 1000 and 500 people respectively. Each boat has a detonator to the other boat's bomb and will be blown up in one hour unless one boat blows the other up first. The question is raised if it would be immoral for the captain on the boat with 1000 people to not blow up the other boat. Some argue that it is selfish not to blow up the other boat, as it would save 1000 lives in the process. Others argue that it is the responsibility of the perpetrator who took the people hostage and that taking any action would make the captain a murderer. Ultimately, it is acknowledged that this is a theoretical situation and that regular morality may not necessarily apply
  • #1
superwolf
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Two boats are with explosives and 1000 and 500 people respectively. Each boat has a detonator to the other boat's bomb. Both boats will be blown up in one hour unless one boat blows the other boat up first.

Will it be immoral of the captain on the boat with 1000 people not to blow the other boat up?
 
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  • #2
superwolf said:
Two boats are with explosives and 1000 and 500 people respectively. Each boat has a detonator to the other boat's bomb. Both boats will be blown up in one hour unless one boat blows the other boat up first.

Will it be immoral of the captain on the boat with 1000 people not to blow the other boat up?
No. In one case, he is killing people, in the other case someone else is killing people. Open & shut.

As far as what will or won't happen, it would be immoral to take action basedd on the word of the mastermind who has already taken them hostage. Who is to say he won't blow them up anyway?
 
  • #3
This is similar to a thread I made called morality of passive/active. I was trying to argue that it would be moral to blow the boat with 5000 up and ultimately save 1000 peoples lives. This is a utilitarian perspective, which most people here disagreed with. I would personally say that it is selfish to not blow up the boat with 5000, as you are simply trying to relinquish yourself of the blame of being personally responsible. In the end you will have cost an extra 1000 lives in the process. Another classic question involves choosing whether or not to smother a crying baby in order to save a group of people being heard and killed.
 
  • #4
madness said:
This is similar to a thread I made called morality of passive/active. I was trying to argue that it would be moral to blow the boat with 5000 up and ultimately save 1000 peoples lives. This is a utilitarian perspective, which most people here disagreed with. I would personally say that it is selfish to not blow up the boat with 5000, as you are simply trying to relinquish yourself of the blame of being personally responsible. In the end you will have cost an extra 1000 lives in the process. Another classic question involves choosing whether or not to smother a crying baby in order to save a group of people being heard and killed.
The point I'm making is: don't commit a crime. Full stop.

This acknowledges that philosophical conundra do not exist in a vacuum; they exist in the real world, where there is a perpetrator who is reponsible for taking these people hostage and you have no idea whether he will blow anyone up or blow everyone up.

Hard as it may be to do, the captain will have to recognize that no one has been killed until and unless he presses the button. And that would make him a murderer. So don't.

The way to lose the least when playing against a madman is to not play by his rules. (That's one of the reasons why modern slasher movies have to be so ridiculously contrived - the antagonist has to be arbitrarily omnipotent in order to always be several steps ahead of the victims. He cannot leave the smallest crack in his labrynth throuigh which an escape from the game is possible.)
 
  • #5
DaveC426913 said:
In one case, he is killing people, in the other case someone else is killing people.

I disagree. He is in a situation in which people will die no matter what. It will be immoral not to choose an action to minimize the number of dead people. He is not killing people. He has to choose between killing 500 and 1500.

I agree with madness. It is selfish not to blow the other boat up. Yes, maybe the captain would get a feeling of guilt by taking an active role in the deaths of the 500 people, but they will die anyway! And a feeling of guilt isn't worth 500 lives anyway!

I honestly don't understand how most people can disagree with me here. Maybe it's an ethical illusion?

DaveC426913 said:
This acknowledges that philosophical conundra do not exist in a vacuum; they exist in the real world, where there is a perpetrator who is reponsible for taking these people hostage and you have no idea whether he will blow anyone up or blow everyone up.

This is a theoretical situation, of course. IF we knew that someone would have to die no matter what, there is absolutely no doubt that the correct choice is to try to minimize the number of deaths.
 
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  • #6
Regardless, it is both. Either boat is legally justified in defending themselves by detonating the other. The ultimate responsibility belongs to the individual (the Joker) no matter what happens.
 
  • #7
drankin said:
Either boat is legally justified in defending themselves by detonating the other.

Which ethical system do you use to justify that?
 
  • #8
There's a similair one we ask (smug) new medical students.

Q>Is it better to save one life or six?
A>Six, they all parrot.
Q>So if you see a healthy jogger go past the hospital you should kill him and use heart/lungs/kidneys/liver to save 6 patients?
 
  • #9
mgb_phys said:
There's a similair one we ask (smug) new medical students.

Q>Is it better to save one life or six?
A>Six, they all parrot.
Q>So if you see a healthy jogger go past the hospital you should kill him and use heart/lungs/kidneys/liver to save 6 patients?

This one is not similar, but very different. If people risked getting killed by doctors, they'd loose their confidence in them and stay at home when they got sick, and more people would die.
 
  • #10
I believe that once people have been put into such a situation, regular morality no longer applies. At that point, one person's morals are as good as the next's.

Then again, I'm not a huge fan of objective "morality" even in the best of times, so...
 
  • #11
"This one is not similar, but very different. If people risked getting killed by doctors, they'd loose their confidence in them and stay at home when they got sick, and more people would die."

Actually, that doesn't make any sense. What smart people would do is stay in constantly poor health so the doctors never kill them. In fact, the more time spent in the hospital, the better.
 
  • #12
mgb_phys said:
There's a similair one we ask (smug) new medical students.

Q>Is it better to save one life or six?
A>Six, they all parrot.
Q>So if you see a healthy jogger go past the hospital you should kill him and use heart/lungs/kidneys/liver to save 6 patients?

But can you really call abstaining from murdering a healthy jogger "Saving" them?
 
  • #13
Saving the patients by killing a jogger. I think it's wrong because few people would like to live in a society where doctors were allowed to kill healthy people.
 
  • #14
Healthy jogger is a bad scenario. A better one is where 7 people are all terminal and only one person has enough healthy parts to save the rest of them.
 
  • #15
DaveC426913 said:
As far as what will or won't happen, it would be immoral to take action basedd on the word of the mastermind who has already taken them hostage.
That's not the problem you were presented. :tongue: It's easy to solve any moral dilemma if you're allowed to change the problem!


There are two separate interesting questions:

(1) What to do if you're in the presented scenario

(2) What to do if you have some amount of confidence (but are not completely certain) that you are in the presented scenario


The opening poster asked (1), not (2).
 
  • #16
How would a doctor catch a healthy jogger? He would have to be pretty healthy himself to keep up. People might get ideas. Did anyone ask the teacher if he was healthy? I mean, he could save 6 people by killing himself in that case. But I guess that doctors are solely responsible for the quality of a person's life so they should be immune to their own ethics.

I agree with Dave. If someone presses that button they become, in part, responsible for the outcome. People might push the button for fear of their lives and then make an ethical excuse later to justify their actions to themselves and others. A less cowardly person wouldn't submit to the whims of a maniac. It only reinforces their behaviour.

That was the point in the movie where I lost interest and was thinking more about how my butt was achy from sitting in the seat and now would be a good time to empty my bladder than I was about the storyline of the movie. The movie could have been cut in half and it would have been twice as good.
 
  • #17
DavidSnider said:
Healthy jogger is a bad scenario. A better one is where 7 people are all terminal and only one person has enough healthy parts to save the rest of them.

The person with the healthy parts should sacrifce himself. I don't think we're justified to kill him, terminal or not.
 
  • #18
Huckleberry said:
If someone presses that button they become, in part, responsible for the outcome.

The difference he makes is that he saves 1000 lives that would otherwise die.
 
  • #19
superwolf said:
The person with the healthy parts should sacrifce himself. I don't think we're justified to kill him, terminal or not.

Are you a healthy jogger? I'm sure there are multiple people dying in hospitals right now that we could distribute your organs to. How could you live with yourself knowing that your body could be used to save all those lives?
 
  • #20
I don't know how, but I can live with it. You can certainly argue that I should sacrifice myself. Maybe it's the right thing to do. I'd only save those who haven't ****ed up their health themselves, though.
 
  • #21
superwolf said:
I don't know how, but I can live with it. You can certainly argue that I should sacrifice myself. Maybe it's the right thing to do. I'd only save those who haven't ****ed up their health themselves, though.

Of course, the convenient exceptions. It's easy to say someone else should sacrifice themselves as long as it's not you. :rolleyes:
 
  • #22
This is not about what I would have done, this is about what one should do. Personally, I'd feel more comfortable dropping an atomic bomb over a city than killing my family with my bare hands. If I had to choose between the two, there is no doubt that the latter is the lesser evil, however.
 
  • #23
superwolf said:
This is not about what I would have done, this is about what one should do. Personally, I'd feel more comfortable dropping an atomic bomb over a city than killing my family with my bare hands. If I had to choose between the two, there is no doubt that the latter is the lesser evil, however.

Unless you can include you while determining morals, then anything you say becomes irrelevant. It then becomes what everyone else should do to be moral but with you being the exception.
 
  • #24
I'm in total agreement with DaveC, and there are many points of view that can be taken to come to this conclusion. Assuming that the person that has both held hostage and loaded with explosives two groups of people is telling the ultimate truth isn't a dilemna, it's stupid. Playing by the arbitrary rules that are set in a situation like that makes one no better than the criminal. Even if you somehow know for an absolute fact that both boats will be detonated should neither flip the switch, you do nothing. The responsibility lies with the criminal, our society and morals are founded upon placing the responsibility on the bad, to suggest that simply the boat with more people is somehow more valuable is immoral. It's definitely a testing scenario but I feel that no matter how you justify your decision, if you were to flip the switch then you're the one that's choosing to kill those other people - what gives you the right to decide that your lives are worth more than theirs?
 
  • #25
"Unless you can include you while determining morals, then anything you say becomes irrelevant. It then becomes what everyone else should do to be moral but with you being the exception."

That's a classic logical fallacy. I forget the name... the "practice what you preach" fallacy, I think, maybe a form of ad hominem, but I'll look it up if you'd like.

Basically, saying that someone's argument is false on the basis of their behavior reflecting their professed beliefs is not logically sound.
 
  • #26
Some people seem to miss the point of philosophy. Saying things like "how can they be sure that he will blow the boat up...", "how are they going to catch the jogger..." and "but then people would be fearful of going to the doctors..." are all irrelevant. The idea is to theorize these sort of moral questions. We could easily adjust these questions to compensate for this i.e. the doctors have some sort of amazingly efficient way to trap the jogger without anyone else seeing, then can replace his body with a robot so that no one notices he has gone and that (if you haven't noticed by now) technology is sufficiently advanced so that the dying patients are bound to be saved by his organs.

I have the dark view that there are no objective moral values; they are made up by us, perhaps from evolution and upbringing and do not necessarily follow logic. Morality isn't well defined and in my opinion no one can say which option would be more morally correct than the other. I would also go as far as saying that not flicking the switch is basically the same as killing the 1000 people on your boat, the outcome is the same, the only difference is the the method in which it is done. Not flicking the switch because he will have to live with the fact that he has killed people could be considered immoral. You could reformulate as: should the captain flick the switch, or condemn 1000 people to die? You can you tell that I'm a cold mathematician :/
 
  • #27
drankin said:
Unless you can include you while determining morals, then anything you say becomes irrelevant. It then becomes what everyone else should do to be moral but with you being the exception.

So I have to be perfect to tell what is right and wrong?
 
  • #28
superwolf said:
I disagree. He is in a situation in which people will die no matter what.
No he is not.

He is in a situation at the hands of a madman who has put thosuands of lives in danger (with the mere presence of the explosives, regardless what happens), told him a bunch of things, and then offered him a means to kill 500 people.

superwolf said:
It will be immoral not to choose an action to minimize the number of dead people. He is not killing people. He has to choose between killing 500 and 1500.
It would be immoral to blow up 500 people. Period.

superwolf said:
This is a theoretical situation, of course. IF we knew that someone would have to die no matter what, there is absolutely no doubt that the correct choice is to try to minimize the number of deaths.
This is the key to the solution.

We can invent a totally, absolutely vacuum-sealed scenario where there are absolutely two and only two choices, sure. But that has nothing to do with real life. Real life is where ethics apply.
 
  • #29
superwolf said:
Two boats are with explosives and 1000 and 500 people respectively. Each boat has a detonator to the other boat's bomb. Both boats will be blown up in one hour unless one boat blows the other boat up first.

Will it be immoral of the captain on the boat with 1000 people not to blow the other boat up?
This one is easy. As the captain of a boat, you are responsible for the people on your boat. The occupants on "your" boat are your responsibilty. You have no choice other than blowing up the other boat and saving your people. Blowing up your people would be the ulitimate betrayal.

If you remove the captain and leave no one person with the obligation to care for anyone, then that would be different.
 
  • #30
Jamma said:
Some people seem to miss the point of philosophy. Saying things like "how can they be sure that he will blow the boat up...", "how are they going to catch the jogger..." and "but then people would be fearful of going to the doctors..." are all irrelevant. The idea is to theorize these sort of moral questions.

No. We don't miss the point. Inventing fictional scenarios gets you fictional moral outcomes.
Real ethics require plausible situations.
 
  • #31
Evo said:
This one is easy. As the captian of a boat, you are responsible for the people on your boat. The occupants on 'your" boat are your responsibilty. You have no choice other than blowing up the other boat and saving your people. Blowing up your people would be the ulitimate betrayal.
Look at the corollary: Does "I'm the captain so these people are my responsibility" really justify a captain deliberately and actively murdering 1500 innocent people?

There are no qualifiers to the above question - no "well if that was the only way..." doesn't cut it. That captain would have to decide to kill 1500 innocent people - with no assurances but a madman that his ship is doomed. What if the madman turned out to be lying?
 
  • #32
fasterthanjoao said:
if you were to flip the switch then you're the one that's choosing to kill those other people - what gives you the right to decide that your lives are worth more than theirs?

because 1000 lives are worth more than 500?

It's either 500, 1000 or 1500. To me the choice is obvious.
 
  • #33
How about this one:

A brilliant transplant surgeon has five patients, each in need of a different organ, each of whom will die without that organ. Unfortunately, there are no organs available to perform any of these five transplant operations. A healthy young traveler, just passing through the city the doctor works in, comes in for a routine checkup. In the course of doing the checkup, the doctor discovers that his organs are compatible with all five of his dying patients. Suppose further that if the young man were to disappear, no-one would suspect the doctor.
 
  • #34
superwolf said:
because 1000 lives are worth more than 500?

It's either 500, 1000 or 1500. To me the choice is obvious.
You are thinking inside the box.

The choice is not "500, 100 or 1500", the choice is do I kill people with my own hands or do I choose not to".
 
  • #35
Evo said:
This one is easy. As the captain of a boat, you are responsible for the people on your boat. The occupants on "your" boat are your responsibilty.

That is, easy from a specific normative theory. An utilitarian will argue that it's immoral of the captain of the boat with 500 passengers to blow the other boat up. Ethics isn't science.
 
<h2>1. What is a life or death dilemma?</h2><p>A life or death dilemma is a situation in which a person must make a decision that could potentially result in the loss of their own life or the life of another person.</p><h2>2. Can morality be applied in a life or death dilemma?</h2><p>Yes, morality can still be applied in a life or death dilemma. While the situation may be extreme, moral principles and values can still guide a person's decision-making process.</p><h2>3. How does one's personal beliefs and values affect their decision in a life or death dilemma?</h2><p>One's personal beliefs and values play a significant role in their decision-making process in a life or death dilemma. These beliefs and values can influence the individual's perception of what is morally right or wrong in the given situation.</p><h2>4. Are there any ethical theories that can help guide decision-making in a life or death dilemma?</h2><p>Yes, there are several ethical theories that can be applied in a life or death dilemma, such as utilitarianism, deontology, and virtue ethics. These theories offer different perspectives on how to make moral decisions in difficult situations.</p><h2>5. How can one prepare for a potential life or death dilemma?</h2><p>While it is impossible to predict when a life or death dilemma may occur, individuals can prepare themselves by reflecting on their personal values and beliefs, and considering how they may approach such a situation. Additionally, discussing and understanding ethical theories can also help individuals make more informed decisions in a life or death dilemma.</p>

1. What is a life or death dilemma?

A life or death dilemma is a situation in which a person must make a decision that could potentially result in the loss of their own life or the life of another person.

2. Can morality be applied in a life or death dilemma?

Yes, morality can still be applied in a life or death dilemma. While the situation may be extreme, moral principles and values can still guide a person's decision-making process.

3. How does one's personal beliefs and values affect their decision in a life or death dilemma?

One's personal beliefs and values play a significant role in their decision-making process in a life or death dilemma. These beliefs and values can influence the individual's perception of what is morally right or wrong in the given situation.

4. Are there any ethical theories that can help guide decision-making in a life or death dilemma?

Yes, there are several ethical theories that can be applied in a life or death dilemma, such as utilitarianism, deontology, and virtue ethics. These theories offer different perspectives on how to make moral decisions in difficult situations.

5. How can one prepare for a potential life or death dilemma?

While it is impossible to predict when a life or death dilemma may occur, individuals can prepare themselves by reflecting on their personal values and beliefs, and considering how they may approach such a situation. Additionally, discussing and understanding ethical theories can also help individuals make more informed decisions in a life or death dilemma.

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