The trolley
problem is a thought experiment in ethics, first introduced by Philippa Foot in 1967,[1]
but also extensively analysed by Judith Jarvis Thomson,[2][3]
Peter Unger,[4] and Frances Kamm as recently as
1996.[5] Outside of the
domain of traditional philosophical discussion, the trolley problem has been a
significant feature in the fields of cognitive science and, more recently, of neuroethics. It has also been a
topic on various TV shows dealing with human psychology.[citation
needed]
The general form of the problem is this: There is a runaway trolley barrelling down the railway tracks. Ahead, on the tracks, there are five people tied up and unable to move. The trolley is headed straight for them. You are standing some distance off in the train yard, next to a lever. If you pull this lever, the trolley will switch to a different set of tracks. Unfortunately, you notice that there is one person on the side track. You have two options: (1) Do nothing, and the trolley kills the five people on the main track. (2) Pull the lever, diverting the trolley onto the side track where it will kill one person. Which is the correct choice?
Foot's original
formulation of the problem ran as follows:[1]
- Suppose that a judge or magistrate is faced with rioters demanding that a culprit be found for a certain crime and threatening otherwise to take their own bloody revenge on a particular section of the community. The real culprit being unknown, the judge sees himself as able to prevent the bloodshed only by framing some innocent person and having him executed. Beside this example is placed another in which a pilot whose aeroplane is about to crash is deciding whether to steer from a more to a less inhabited area. To make the parallel as close as possible it may rather be supposed that he is the driver of a runaway tram which he can only steer from one narrow track on to another; five men are working on one track and one man on the other; anyone on the track he enters is bound to be killed. In the case of the riots the mob have five hostages, so that in both the exchange is supposed to be one man's life for the lives of five.
A utilitarian view asserts
that it is obligatory to steer to the track with one man on it. According to
simple utilitarianism, such a decision would be not only permissible, but,
morally speaking, the better option (the other option being no action at
all).[6] An alternate
viewpoint is that since moral wrongs are already in place in the situation,
moving to another track constitutes a participation in the moral wrong, making
one partially responsible for the death when otherwise no one would be
responsible. An opponent of action may also point to the incommensurability of human lives.
Under some interpretations of moral
obligation, simply being present in this situation and being able to
influence its outcome constitutes an obligation to participate. If this were the
case, then deciding to do nothing would be considered an immoral act if one
values five lives more than one.
Related problems[edit]
The fat man[edit]
One such is that offered
by Judith
Jarvis Thomson:
- As before, a trolley is hurtling down a track towards five people. You are on a bridge under which it will pass, and you can stop it by dropping a heavy weight in front of it. As it happens, there is a very fat man next to you – your only way to stop the trolley is to push him over the bridge and onto the track, killing him to save five. Should you proceed?
Resistance to this
course of action seems strong; most people who approved of sacrificing one to
save five in the first case do not approve in the second sort of
case.[7] This has led to
attempts to find a relevant moral distinction between the two cases.
One clear distinction is
that in the first case, one does not intend harm towards anyone – harming the
one is just a side effect of switching the trolley
away from the five. However, in the second case, harming the one is an integral
part of the plan to save the five. This is an argument Shelly Kagan considers, and ultimately rejects, in
The Limits of Morality.[8]
So, a claim can be made
that the difference between the two cases is that in the second, you intend
someone's death to save the five, and this is wrong, whereas in the first, you
have no such intention. This solution is essentially an application of the doctrine of double effect, which says
that you may take action which has bad side effects, but deliberately intending
harm (even for good causes) is wrong.
Act utilitarians
deny this. So do some non-utilitarians such as Peter Unger, who rejects that it
can make a substantive moral difference whether you bring the harm to the one or
whether you move the one into the path of the harm.[citation
needed] Note, however, that rule utilitarians do not have to accept
this, and can say that pushing the fat man over the bridge violates a rule to
which adherence is necessary for bringing about the greatest happiness for the
greatest number.[citation
needed]
Another distinction is
that the first case is similar to a pilot in an airplane that has lost power and
is about to crash and currently heading towards a heavily populated area. Even
if he knows for sure that innocent people will die if he redirects the plane to
a less populated area – people who are "uninvolved" – he will actively turn the
plane without hesitation. It may well be considered noble to sacrifice your own
life to protect others, but morally or legally allowing murder of an innocent
person in order to save five people may be insufficient justification.[clarification
needed]
The fat villain[edit]
This section does not cite any references or sources. (August 2012) |
The further development
of this example involves the case, where the fat man is, in fact, the villain
who put these five people in peril. In this instance, pushing the villain to his
death, especially to save five innocent people, seems not just moral, but, to
some[who?],
also just and even an imperative. This is essentially related to another famous
thought experiment, known as ticking time bomb scenario, which
forces one to choose between two morally questionable acts. Several papers argue
that ticking time bomb scenario is a mere variation of the trolley problem.
The loop variant[edit]
- As before, a trolley is hurtling down a track towards five people. As in the first case, you can divert it onto a separate track. However, this diversion loops back around to rejoin the main track, so diverting the trolley still leaves it on a path to run over the five people. But, on this track is a single fat person who, when he is killed by the trolley, will stop it from continuing on to the five people. Should you flip the switch?
The rejoining variant
may not be fatal to the "using a person as a means" argument. This has been
suggested by M. Costa in his 1987 article "Another Trip on the Trolley", where
he points out that if we fail to act in this scenario we will effectively be
allowing the five to become a means to save the one. If we do nothing, then the
impact of the trolley into the five will slow it down and prevent it from
circling around and killing the one.[citation
needed] As in either case, some will become a means to
saving others, then we are permitted to count the numbers. This approach
requires that we downplay the moral difference between doing and allowing.
Transplant[edit]
Here is an alternative
case, due to Judith Jarvis Thomson,[3]
containing similar numbers and results, but without a trolley:
- 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.
The man in the yard[edit]
- As before, a trolley is hurtling down a track towards five people. You can divert its 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. Should you proceed?
Unger also considers
cases which are more complex than the original trolley problem, involving more
than just two results. In one such case, it is possible to do something which
will (a) save the five and kill four (passengers of one or more trolleys and/or
the hammock-sleeper), (b) save the five and kill three, (c) save the five and
kill two, (d) save the five and kill one, or (e) do nothing and let five die.
Most naïve subjects presented with this sort of case, claims Unger, will choose
(d), to save the five by killing one, even if this course of action involves
doing something very similar to killing the fat man, as in Thomson's case
above.[citation
needed]
In cognitive science[edit]
The trolley problem was
first imported into cognitive science from philosophy in a systematic way by
Hauser, Mikhail, et al,[9] They hypothesized
that factors such as gender, age, education level, and cultural background would
have little influence on the judgments people make, in part because those
judgments are generated by an unconscious “moral grammar”[10] that is analogous
in some respects to the unconscious linguistic grammars that have been claimed
by Noam Chomsky et al to
support ordinary language use ( this latter claim regarding language has been
strongly rebutted by Dan Everett and by Evans and Levinson.[11]) It should be
noted that the data in Hauser, Mikhail et al's 2007 paper only contains 33
individuals brought up in a non-English-speaking educational system. The main
author, Marc Hauser, was
subsequently sanctioned by his then employer, Harvard University, in eight
(unrelated) cases of gross research malpractice and data falsification, which
arguably makes the data in any case unreliable. Subsequent cross-cultural
research has found many apparent counterexamples to this idea of 'Universal
Moral Grammar'[12]
In neuroethics[edit]
In taking a
neuroscientific approach to the trolley problem, Joshua Greene[13] under Jonathan
Cohen decided to examine the nature of brain response to moral and ethical
conundra through the use of fMRI. In their more well-known experiments,[14] Greene and Cohen
analyzed subjects' responses to the morality of responses in both the trolley
problem involving a switch, and a footbridge scenario analogous to the fat man
variation of the trolley problem. Their hypothesis suggested that encountering
such conflicts evokes both a strong emotional response as well as a reasoned
cognitive response that tend to oppose one another. From the fMRI results, they have found
that situations highly evoking a more prominent emotional response such as the
fat man variant would result in significantly higher brain activity in brain
regions associated with response conflict. Meanwhile, more conflict-neutral
scenarios, such as the relatively disaffected switch variant, would produce more
activity in brain regions associated with higher cognitive functions. The
potential ethical ideas being broached, then, revolve around the human capacity
for rational justification of moral decision making.
Psychology[edit]
Daniel Bartels of
Columbia University found that individual reactions to trolley problems is
context sensitive and that around 90% would refuse the act of deliberately
killing one individual to save five lives.[15][full citation
needed] Further study by Daniel Bartels and David Pizarro
focused on those 10% who made utilitarian choice. The study asked participants
to series of value statement. The experiment found that those who had stronger
utilitarian leaning had stronger tendency to psychopathy, Machiavellianism or tended to view life as
meaningless.[16] The Economist
magazine who reported this finding stated that "utilitarians, ... may add to the
sum of human happiness, but they are not very happy people themselves."[17]
Views of professional philosophers[edit]
A 2009 survey published
in a 2013 paper by David Bourget and David Chalmers shows that 68% of professional
philosophers would switch (sacrifice the one individual to save five lives) in
the case of the trolley problem, 8% would not switch, and the remaining 24% had
another view or could not answer.[18]
As urban legend[edit]
This section requires expansion with: Description of the legend. (February 2012) |
In an urban legend that has been
making the rounds since at least the mid-1960s, the decision must be made by a
drawbridge keeper who must choose between sacrificing a passenger train or his
own four-year-old son. There is a 2003 Czech film Most or The Bridge (USA) which
deals with a similar plot.[19] This version is
often drawn as a deliberate allegory to the belief among some Christians that God sacrificed his
son, Jesus Christ.[20]
Wikipedia
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