I see your point. I still think it comes down to the type of question. The kill 1 to save many is a decent hypothetical. I would say no to that as well... for pretty much the reason mentioned.Dejawesp said:Sniparoo
The doctor one, though, is a good hypothetical. And for that one my answer wouldn't be to try to save 6, it would be "fuck that's a decision I never want to have to make". Anyone who says all 6 is... not wrong, but missing the point and I'll give you that one.
However, what was kinda getting at and what this fellow did get at:
The simpler the question the better. The more specific and grounded in reality the hypothetical is, the better chance someone is going to try to poke holes. Questions like the doctor one are good because that is an entirely reasonable dilemma.spartan231490 said:People are going to answer the question you ask, not the question you meant, because they can't read your mind. That's what I was saying. If all you want is "would you let someone like that go for money?" then ask that. would you allow someone like bin laden to live for $10million dollars.
Oh oh oh, and the two scenarios you gave work well with my whole "saving lives is not a math problem" thing I end up saying whenever stuff like that comes up. Especially the doctor one since the math answer is try to save 6 when really the less you try to save, the more you probably will save.