Variations on the Trolley Problem

I'm sure we've talked about the famous 'trolley problem' many times. Classically, there's no right answer to it, but it exists to expose the fact that moral intuitions differ. You ask a group of people to consider this problem:
There's an out of control trolley speeding toward a group of people. If it rushes in amongst them, it will kill a number of them and injure others. You are near a switch that would allow you to redirect the trolley away from those people, onto a track where there's only one person. Do you pull the switch?
What we learn from the problem is that some people feel very strongly that it would be wrong to pull the switch, because that implicates them in guilt for killing the one man. The world as they find it is not their fault, but electing to act means taking responsibility for the choice. Thus, they will let many people die to avoid being personally guilty for one death.

Others -- myself included -- feel that not acting is also a choice, and the desire to avoid responsibility is thus a false choice. Even here, moral intuitions differ. Some will pull the switch, believing it better to choose to save more lives. Others will refuse, believing that their chief duty is to refuse to commit murder. Roughly speaking, these choices break you out into the two leading contemporary schools of ethics, consequentialism (i.e., that morality means doing what has the best consequences for the most people) and deontology (i.e., that morality means doing your duty).

Now that I've told you all that, in case any readers weren't familiar with it, we can all enjoy the joke together.

UPDATE: Still more variations.

6 comments:

MikeD said...

I let the trolley hit Kant.

Grim said...

But Bentham was so well prepared!

MikeD said...

Well, perhaps... but history has shown what a tragic error that turned out to be.

Grim said...

Heh. :) She's right, of course. Virtue ethics has a stronger claim than either deontology or utilitarianism.

raven said...

You are a politician. You see an out of control trolley speeding toward a large group of well dressed people.
You can throw a switch and divert the trolley to run over one homeless drunk guy asleep on the other track, and save the crowd.
You are caught in a savage quandary- will the donations from saving the grateful crowd be more or less lucrative than stealing the wallets from the dead?

The Old Man said...

Y'all have not seen the Kobayashi Maru resolution. Move the switch/jam it/ hold it in place to derail the trolley.
And then live with it...