Thursday, November 20, 2008

Killing time before the Steeler game: Happy Philosophy Day

David Bain, a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Glasgow, wrote a neat little piece for bbc.com. He puts forth 4 questions, the first being my favorite which i will post here for debate until kickoff at 8:15 tonight.

The question: Should we kill healthy people for their organs?

Suppose Bill is a healthy man without family or loved ones. Would it be ok painlessly to kill him if his organs would save five people, one of whom needs a heart, another a kidney, and so on? If not, why not?

Consider another case: you and six others are kidnapped, and the kidnapper somehow persuades you that if you shoot dead one of the other hostages, he will set the remaining five free, whereas if you do not, he will shoot all six. (Either way, he'll release you.)

If in this case you should kill one to save five, why not in the previous, organs case? If in this case too you have qualms, consider yet another: you're in the cab of a runaway tram and see five people tied to the track ahead. You have the option of sending the tram on to the track forking off to the left, on which only one person is tied. Surely you should send the tram left, killing one to save five.

But then why not kill Bill?


Me? I would kill one to save many.