this post was submitted on 25 Aug 2023
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This logic could be applied to the original trolley problem as well - pulling the lever is condemning an innocent person to death and you are directly responsible for it, while you are not responsible for the trolley continuing on its course and killing five people.
The difference, and what makes the trolley problem more effective I think, is that the trolley problem doesnβt give us the framework of a judicial system, rule of law, whereas the judge has that.
I think, anyway. I only took intro philosophy classes.
Having skimmed the original paper about the trolley problem, I think what the author was trying to illustrate was the difference between direct and indirect harm.
If you redirect the trolley, you're not trying to kill the man on the other track. You're trying to save the five on the first track by directing the trolley away from them. While the other man may die because of this, there's always the possibility he'll escape on his own.
Whereas if the judge sentences an innocent man to death, that is choosing to kill him. The innocent man MUST die for the outcome the judge intends. So there's culpability that doesn't exist in the trolley scenario.
In one case you're accepting a bad outcome for one person as a side effect, in the other you're pursuing it as a necessary step.
That makes sense. The original problem is "do nothing" vs. "do something", while this version is "do something just" vs. "do something unjust".
True but then that's where personal philosophy comes in. Doing nothing is still an action to me especially if I was aware. It's rather be responsible for one death rather then several.