HUMN 330 Week 5 Discussion | Assignment Help | Embry Riddle
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HUMN 330 Week 5 Discussion | Assignment Help | Embry Riddle
Module 5 - Discussion 1: Ethical Dilemmas -
The Trolley Problem, In Theory and In The Real World
View the following videos.
·
Trolley Car
Dilemma - Harvard's Michael Sandel (14:59) - In this video,
Havard professor Micahel Sandel discusses the classic Trolley Dilemma and its
various versions to an ethics class. As you view the video reflect on the
scenario presented to you in module overview.
·
The Trolley
Problem and Ethics of Driver-less Cars (5:07) - While the
various Trolley Dilemmmas represent hypothetical (and thus somewhat
unrealistic) situations, this video depicts a modern, real-world example of the
application of the same kinds of dilemmas and decisions.
After watching the videos, post a thoughtful
critique addressing the following questions:
·
How would you respond
to each of the variants of the Trolley Problem described below? Be thorough and
justify your reasoning. Note: You cannot add any elements to
change the situation - i.e., you cannot rush in and untie the people from the
tract, etc. You must make the choice between only the options given. For each
scenario, think about whether or not the answers to the following two questions
differ: What is the right thing to do and What would you do? In each of these
cases 1-4 the result will be the death of 1 person and saving the lives of 5
people.
1. Original problem - you are the trolley driver;
decision is to pull switch or not.
2. Fat man variant - you are an observer on a
bridge; decision is to push fat man or not.
3. Fat man/villain variant - you are an observer
on a bridge; decision is to push fat man or not; fat man is the villain who put
the five people in danger on the tracks.
4. Loved one variant - you are the trolley
driver; decision is to pull the switch or not; the 1 person that would die if
you pull the switch is a dear loved one of yours (parent, child, spouse, etc.)
5. Man sleeping in his yard variant - you can
divert trolley's path by colliding another trolley into it, but if you do, both
will be derailed and go down a hill, and into a yard where a man is sleeping in
a hammock. He would be killed.
·
What if instead of
killing 1 person to save 5, your action would result in killing 4 people to
save 5? Would you change your behavior in any of the situations? Why or why
not?
·
Transplant variant -
This version addresses some of the same core issues as the Trolley Problem but
with the following scenario: 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 that if the young man were to disappear, no one
would suspect the doctor. Should the doctor to kill that tourist and provide
his healthy organs to those five dying persons to ave their lives? How is this
the scenario the same and how does it differ from the Trolley Problem?
Read your peers' posts
and comment in a respectful manner to at least one classmate that you agree
with and one that you disagree with. Be specific in your responses to their
positions. Review the discussion guidelines and the evaluation rubric to ensure your submission meets
the standard.