Here's my justification: The TRAIN is going to kill those people. Not me. If I can make a choice that saves more people, that's the choice I'm going to make. I'm saving people, not killing them.
Bullshit. I don't know what the legal logistics are. But either way, you are making a choice to allow some people to die and some people to live. Given the situation (you know nothing about any of the people in question, they are equally strangers to you and it takes approximately as much effort to pull the switch as to walk away) both options make you equally involved and equally guilty (or innocent) of whatever you want to call the act.
I think you
completely missed my point. I'm not talking about the difference between pulling a switch and not pulling.
I'm talking about the difference between the two polls.
In one poll, a train is going to kill some people. You cause it to kill less people if you pull a switch.
In the other poll, some people are going to die of disease. You can save them by killing an innocent man.
It's not the same choice at all.[/quote]
Are you sure?
If you remove all feelings of subjectivity then at the end of the day you are choosing to let one person die vs 5 people die, and it is in your power to decide which way it goes.
The person on the track is innocent, and until you pulled the switch they too were going to live.
The only difference is that instead of a switch, you pulled a switch blade on the patient.
If you had 5 generating stations that were at the end of their life, and one good working generating station that you could gut for the other five power plants, you would probably make the logical, economic choice.
The ONLY difference between that and all three situations is that the one plant you're going to sacrifice is self aware.
There are other minor differences as posed, but those are unavoidable differences in wording, the essential question is the same.
-Adam