Trolly Problem Memes (But Taking Them Seriously)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
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    -------------------------VIDEO NOTES-------------------------
    The Trolley Problem was given its name by Judith Jarvis Thompson in 1976, and since then has become an iconic mainstay of ethical philosophy, and surprisingly embedded into popular culture.
    The variants on the original problem are now tending towards infinity, and I decided to take some of the more challenging, absurd trolley problems and discuss the implications of pulling that famous lever.
    -------------------------------LINKS--------------------------------
    Trolley Problem Memes: / trolleyproblemmemes
    Princeton MRI study: pr.princeton.edu/news/01/q3/0...
    ------------------------TIMESTAMPS--------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    0:36 The Original Trolley Problem
    1:45 Problem One
    5:10 Problem Two
    8:50 Problem Three
    13:00 Problem Four
    15:12 Problem Five
    17:34 Problem Six
    19:17 Outro
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic  Год назад +227

    Episode two of Trolley Problem Memes is available now! ruclips.net/video/sHP_Yp6QSxU/видео.html

    • @craigcorson3036
      @craigcorson3036 Год назад

      Here's another solution to the problem: ruclips.net/video/-N_RZJUAQY4/видео.html

    • @icturner23
      @icturner23 Год назад

      Why did you spell it wrongly in the title of this video?

    • @tamakio6384
      @tamakio6384 Год назад +1

      Foot must be on the ground. ##### She never knew the problems of humankind.

    • @craigcorson3036
      @craigcorson3036 Год назад +1

      @@icturner23 It's time you knew: he's English, and they often spell some words differently from the way Americans do. It isn't wrong, it's English.

    • @TheDancefreak35
      @TheDancefreak35 Год назад

      If you pull the lever, the trolly will derail due to the sharp turn. If the trolly tips over, it will probably still slide over the five people and the chance that it will also catch that one person on the rails is quite high. Then you have six victims instead of five.
      Pushing that fat person off the bridge is also not an option because there is no guarantee that the trolly will stop in time before it reaches the people on the rails.
      If you were sure that the trolly would slow down a lot in that case, the best option you have is to first push the fat one off the bridge and then pull the lever. The trolly might derail, but it would have lost so much momentum that it would not move any further and would no longer hit the people on the rails.
      But of course a real hero jumps in front of the train himself.
      dilemmas, dilemmas.

  • @__8120
    @__8120 Год назад +3918

    My favorite one is where the trolley is running over an infinite number of people and the prompt says "you can stop the trolley at any time, but would that really be fair to all the people it already killed?"

    • @valoaras9729
      @valoaras9729 Год назад +474

      "where you stop making loss is profit" is a turkish idiom which is kinda self explenatory which means if you are making a loss, or bad things are happening and the moment you do something to stop it, you are actually kind of profiting or did a good thing since you have avoided further loss/bad things. There is also the fact that equity doesn't mean equality. In the considiration of these, stopping the trolley is the only moral thing to do. Because you can not ressurect someone who is dead, they are irreversibly gone. In anohter aspects to this. it is undair to say that other should die too because there are people who already died. Why should alive people suffer becuase some other people died? it is not fait to say people should suffer because some did.
      thanks for coming to my ted talk

    • @marc-andreservant201
      @marc-andreservant201 Год назад

      If you pull the lever, you killed a countably infinite number of people. If you pull it a finite amount of time later, you killed a countably infinite number of people. Both outcomes are exactly the same. Don't believe me? Give everyone a unique number representing the order they were killed (0 being the current position of the trolley, negative numbers being people killed in the past and positive numbers are people yet to be killed). In the first situation, you killed -1, -2, -3, ...
      In the second situation, you killed 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, -1, -2, -3, ...
      But there is a bijection between the two sets f(x) = x - 5 therefore both sets are exactly the same size.

    • @EagerSleeper
      @EagerSleeper Год назад +340

      That sounds a little like a Student Loan Forgiveness parallel 😆

    • @__8120
      @__8120 Год назад +181

      @@EagerSleeper actually I believe that meme was made right around the height of that topic

    • @Fractured_Unity
      @Fractured_Unity Год назад +148

      @@EagerSleeper It is a parallel to basically every boomer talking point.

  • @toanuva6178
    @toanuva6178 Год назад +2801

    “Babe come over”
    “I can’t right now, I’m experiencing an Ethical Dilemma”
    “My entire Family isn’t home”
    *“I know”*

  • @onesqueazyboi8666
    @onesqueazyboi8666 Год назад +2921

    I like the one that goes "You can stop the trolley at anytime, saving everyone, but doing so means that, as you untie them, you would have to engage in some brief small talk"

    • @CyanideCarrot
      @CyanideCarrot 7 месяцев назад +92

      no hablo ingles

    • @collinbeal
      @collinbeal 7 месяцев назад +72

      This one is brutal

    • @Aenimus12
      @Aenimus12 7 месяцев назад +6

      Is it called Curb your trolley?

    • @agustinbarquero8898
      @agustinbarquero8898 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@CyanideCarrotinglés*

    • @Amatureb
      @Amatureb 6 месяцев назад +59

      I'm sorry people on the track, but there is really only one answer to that.

  • @MothmanOfficialWva
    @MothmanOfficialWva Год назад +1863

    My favorite one is the “moral Philosophers Trolley problem”
    There is actually nobody tied to the track, but you are a moral philosopher. Would you tie people to the tracks to save your job?

    • @saint037
      @saint037 5 месяцев назад +40

      I've just unlocked a whole new internet

    • @fandroid6491
      @fandroid6491 5 месяцев назад +8

      The real question is why the hell am I a moral philosopher and not a cool actor?

    • @Cindomis
      @Cindomis 5 месяцев назад +6

      This is actually the reality you live in right now

    • @theblaze5530
      @theblaze5530 3 месяца назад +1

      Now i know who is going around tying people up to tracks

  • @YourMom-kp2xh
    @YourMom-kp2xh Год назад +18559

    I like the one that says “you can stop the trolley at any time, but doing so would be bad for the trolley company’s profit margins”

    • @kelpkelp5252
      @kelpkelp5252 Год назад +108

      Why would it?

    • @keeyan2166
      @keeyan2166 Год назад +574

      I know what Liz Truss would do

    • @gg-up4md
      @gg-up4md Год назад +1580

      @@kelpkelp5252 Because it would have to stop, causing a delay in all trolley rides for the day, which causes people to be late for work/meetings, get angry at the trolley company, file complaints, ask back money, etc. And damaging the companies' reputation

    • @tommy2972
      @tommy2972 Год назад +290

      I think litigation would be more expensive. But its a great joke.

    • @JFat5158
      @JFat5158 Год назад +407

      @@gg-up4md funny because the track would be closed much longer if a death happens

  • @ironichoneybadger5066
    @ironichoneybadger5066 Год назад +3562

    I like the one where you can’t do anything to stop the trolley from running over an endless line of people, but you can change the color of the trolley, which is nice

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад +154

      Make it rainbow coloured and cover it in daisies! Or make it red!

    • @mewtuwa
      @mewtuwa Год назад +249

      I like the one about choosing between 2 infinite lines of people, but one infinity was larger than the other.

    • @IETass
      @IETass Год назад +42

      That one is political, don't mean to burst your bubble

    • @valoaras9729
      @valoaras9729 Год назад +86

      imagine getting kiled by RGB gamer trolley

    • @ironichoneybadger5066
      @ironichoneybadger5066 Год назад +17

      @@IETass I’m aware it’s political

  • @TiagoTiagoT
    @TiagoTiagoT 9 месяцев назад +438

    The brain-in-a-vat situation is a bit more complicated as the brain is drawn as not being on the rail, which could imply the individual contained in the brain might survive the experience. So the question there, in text form, could be: "would you rather permanently kill someone or make someone live with the trauma of experiencing being killed?"

    • @ali8800
      @ali8800 6 месяцев назад +50

      exactly! I was so peeved he never pointed that out

    • @amazinggrapes3045
      @amazinggrapes3045 5 месяцев назад +13

      Important distinction!

    • @gwilymhughes3512
      @gwilymhughes3512 5 месяцев назад +4

      It says they experience death

    • @StickmanCorp
      @StickmanCorp 5 месяцев назад +29

      ​@@gwilymhughes3512It says they *experience* death, but not that they actally die. Experiencing something requires being alive.

    • @milomarchiori840
      @milomarchiori840 5 месяцев назад +4

      @@StickmanCorphe didn’t explore the consequences of that implication either way

  • @SebasTian58323
    @SebasTian58323 Год назад +208

    I think the reason people are more hesitant to push the fatman is rather obvious. He's not already tied to the tracks. He's not truly involved in the trolley problem unless you push him onto the tracks. In the lever example, for whatever reason, the lone guy is already there and part of the trolley problem.

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад +7

      This variant is dumb in many ways like a lot said the fat guy cannot be fat enough to stop the trolley but in a world where it was possible pushing him is the way he is not an innocent bystander cause he's watching at that point there's two solution he want to help or not if he help he's a hero and I will tell his tale but if he don't he's the meany and it's clearly the best thing to do to push him
      I mean the attached people are the true victim of this story
      Him by seeing the thing is involved as much as you he has probably traumatized to have to make a choice and that's why he didn't already jump maybe he's trying and need help and ofc if I'm the fattiest one I'll jump
      Imagine your last conversation with someone is about your weight to know what is the most moral thing to do (the fattiest will have more chance of stopping the trolley)
      Gracefully no fat people will ever be armed in this way cause everyone know it is not possible in our reality to stop a trolley like that ^^

    • @jadencasto
      @jadencasto 5 месяцев назад +20

      I completely agree. Like he offered a critique of utilitarianism, but then took as purely utilitarian approach to the fat man scenario. The fat man is a bystander who you are involving and then killing. The person tied to the track is already somehow involved.

    • @Pyedr
      @Pyedr 4 месяца назад +7

      I find it straightforward to phrase it as:
      I'm OK with living in a world where being tied to tracks means you might be run over; I'm not OK with a world where standing on a bridge means you might be pushed off it in front of a trolley.

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 4 месяца назад

      @@Pyedr I agree with you but we live in a world where nobody can stop a train if it's a proposed solution to stop the train it's not a problem of our world and we have to think outside of our view in that world idk if I was in that world I'd jump myself no need to be pushed ^^ I'd be fat for that reason ahah

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 4 месяца назад

      o.o

  • @Questionable_Content
    @Questionable_Content Год назад +2778

    "You can stop the trolly at any time, but you will no longer be able to use the threat of the trolly hitting the people to garner the votes of the people on the tracks"

    • @landon8214
      @landon8214 Год назад +33

      I let the trolley run its course so I can get their votes.

    • @cleanerben9636
      @cleanerben9636 Год назад +136

      "you also paid for the trolley to be built"

    • @velocityraptor2890
      @velocityraptor2890 Год назад +59

      @@cleanerben9636 American politics at their finest

    • @xtrems2
      @xtrems2 Год назад +27

      @@velocityraptor2890 Only american? You sure?

    • @velocityraptor2890
      @velocityraptor2890 Год назад +15

      @@xtrems2 I never said there couldn't be more

  • @JuanMPalacio
    @JuanMPalacio Год назад +3635

    My favourite trolly problems meme is the the “Hedonist’s Trolley Problem”. The trolley can hit five and it does a “sick loop-da-loop” OR it hits one but you don’t get to see it do the loop-da-loop.

    • @ruthlesspopcorn9426
      @ruthlesspopcorn9426 Год назад +357

      The choice is obvious

    • @1337xnoob
      @1337xnoob Год назад +270

      @@ruthlesspopcorn9426 yes the loop de loop

    • @csar07.
      @csar07. Год назад +140

      The need of the one over the needs of the loop-da-loop

    • @sezedal
      @sezedal Год назад +1

      🪦🪦🪦🪦🪦🚃➿

    • @JuanMPalacio
      @JuanMPalacio Год назад +191

      @@csar07. Well, the one who isn’t hit also gets to see the loop-da-loop so it’s actually the needs of two.

  • @FectacularSpail
    @FectacularSpail Год назад +70

    My favorite trolley problem is the one where you can pull the lever to divert the trolley onto a track with no people, and everyone is saved, but you'd be hailed as a hero and a bunch of people would want to shake your hand and congratulate you, and the media would want interviews, and it's just so much social interaction you just don't have the spoons for.

    • @Dr._Bo
      @Dr._Bo Месяц назад

      Fuck them people, being famous is a nightmare for me😭

  • @bakuhakudraws5603
    @bakuhakudraws5603 Год назад +176

    I had the exact opposite response to problem 5: I instinctively came at it from the angle that 1 person witnessing 5 deaths and then being left completely alone with that trauma is far worse than 5 people witnessing 1 death, but being able to share that burden, knowing others are struggling with it, and being able to support one another feels far less terrible to me.
    I suppose that speaks to the value one places on community and how much sharing trauma with others can ease the burden of it, which will vary greatly from person to person. That said, it would also depend greatly on how much time separates the deaths, whether the remaining victims KNOW they're dying immediately after, and a ton of other factors.

    • @davemiller7692
      @davemiller7692 Год назад +6

      You came 🤨

    • @emilymathis4237
      @emilymathis4237 Год назад +28

      Same, was looking for a comment like this
      The whole time listening to his breakdown of problem 5 rubbed me wrong bc all I could think of was the poor guy being all alone after seeing the other deaths vs a small group with the pain spread among them

    • @jackbarrett3599
      @jackbarrett3599 6 месяцев назад +5

      I thought about it the exact same way!

    • @butast6520
      @butast6520 6 месяцев назад +4

      by pulling the lever you whould involve yourself in the question too

    • @reservoirfrogs2177
      @reservoirfrogs2177 5 месяцев назад +2

      In real life there are support groups and therapy, plus their friends and family. And just because they all saw it doesn’t mean they will comfort each other, hell they could make it exponentially worse.

  • @Blowingmind
    @Blowingmind Год назад +790

    "you can bet I'd be pulling the lever twice"
    Proceeds to kill all 7 people by dual track drifting

  • @tosuchino6465
    @tosuchino6465 Год назад +1258

    Aside from the "a fat man on the bridge" situation, there is a technical (but not moral) solution to this class of problems. A Japanese engineer created a miniature railroad model based on the conditions in the original problem and conducted experiments. He discovered that if he pulled the lever right after the front wheels of the trolly went in one direction but before the hind wheels went there, the trolly got off the track and stopped before it hit anyone. He repeated it multiple times and everytime he successfully stopped the trolly. 😆

    • @lily_littleangel
      @lily_littleangel Год назад +491

      Wait so it wouldn't start multi track drifting?
      That's a shame.

    • @Geostelar4920
      @Geostelar4920 Год назад +189

      Finding a third solution by thinking creatively hmm

    • @palmberry5576
      @palmberry5576 Год назад +39

      @@lily_littleangel yeah, I was hoping that was his solution

    • @striker8961
      @striker8961 Год назад +142

      @@Geostelar4920 almost like no imaginary scenario is beyond the creative ingenuity of humanity to solve no matter how much they try to box us in

    • @aspiring.creative.person6092
      @aspiring.creative.person6092 Год назад +18

      Omg it’s like a Star Trek or Doctor Who episode

  • @manlymemez
    @manlymemez 6 месяцев назад +32

    I think the problem with "the trolley problem" is that some other evil force tied up all 6 people, dehumanizing and discussing what to do with their lives, when in reality, that 3rd party mysterious person has all the blame when the problem starts, and if you pull the lever, you still probably dont have the blame, in the end game, pushing the fat person, that, you are pushing a free person, into a situation, that you would be guilty of

  • @steverempel8584
    @steverempel8584 Год назад +32

    My favorite version of the trolley problem is when you see a train going for one person on the tracks, then you switch it to the other rail, and only then do you realize the train is now going to hit 5 people.
    The show "The Good Place" also had an excellent solution to the trolley problem, they suggested adding an extra spike attachment to the wheels of the train so it could get all 6 people.

  • @finleymorris04
    @finleymorris04 Год назад +1974

    I love the long explanation about how the brain in the vat has moral value getting undercut by “Well, the brain in the vat has no friends, so”

    • @tatiana4050
      @tatiana4050 Год назад +195

      So rude. I would definitely be friends with brain in the vat

    • @ronrolfsen3977
      @ronrolfsen3977 Год назад +166

      @@tatiana4050 I mean...we are all just a brain in a vat. The vat is just made of skin and bone.

    • @Syuvinya
      @Syuvinya Год назад +23

      I mean. The brain's imaginary friends have as much consciousness as real people.

    • @paulvancoughnett3880
      @paulvancoughnett3880 Год назад +102

      @@Syuvinya but the imaginary friends would be erased by killing the brain, they wouldn't experience any trauma. The friends of the person not in a vat would have to live without the person.

    • @trevorlambert4226
      @trevorlambert4226 Год назад +19

      @@Syuvinya um, nope

  • @newgate-zerohour
    @newgate-zerohour Год назад +841

    I like the one that goes
    "You finally found and killed him, the person who was tying all these people to the tracks in the first place."
    "So you killed one person in order to save more people from death?"

    • @Niyucuatro
      @Niyucuatro Год назад +75

      No. It was to provide justice for those who are already dead.

    • @michaelmiky11
      @michaelmiky11 Год назад +18

      @@Niyucuatro The right answer

    • @Eshtian
      @Eshtian Год назад +12

      @@Niyucuatro both

    • @Niyucuatro
      @Niyucuatro Год назад +10

      @@Eshtian not eally. Even if he had stoped with the track tying, he still deserves punishment.

    • @Eshtian
      @Eshtian Год назад +6

      @@Niyucuatro well ya, but assuming he was still doing it, killing in order to stop him from doing it further is also a valid reason

  • @stevencowan37
    @stevencowan37 8 месяцев назад +209

    The problem I have with the fatman variation of the problem is threefold:
    A) Nobody is sufficiently fat enough to stop a multi-ton vehicle in/on its tracks.
    B) If someone were sufficiently fat, there would be nobody who could actually push them effectively.
    C) If two people, one sufficiently fat and one sufficiently strong to push someone that heavy exist, then that second person should be able to just stop the trolley themselves.

    • @ArlindoDestruidor
      @ArlindoDestruidor 6 месяцев назад

      You are mentally closed

    • @Joural0401
      @Joural0401 6 месяцев назад +51

      "trolley problem unrealistic"
      You should get into youtube politics, your grasp of the obvious is unprecedented

    • @user-hd6hh3re5h
      @user-hd6hh3re5h 6 месяцев назад +10

      I saw a similar problem in the fatman variation. The fat man wouldn't do anything to stop the trolley at all if it's able to kill those 5 people all lined up together. The fat man would get absolutely destroyed, followed by the 5 people on the track, meaning the fat man's sacrifice was in vein and now 6 innocent lives have been lost.

    • @fishstickbye4060
      @fishstickbye4060 5 месяцев назад +14

      @@user-hd6hh3re5hI can’t tell of you’re being serious so I’ll just explain anyway: The fatman would 100% stop the train- because that’s how the problem is set up. of course in real life a fat man would not stop the trolley, it’s just a mechanism of explaining the moral question. If you’re going to take the problem at such ridiculous face value, you might as well say pulling the lever wouldn’t do anything because it’s not even hooked up to the train tracks.

    • @Kol-xb6mv
      @Kol-xb6mv 5 месяцев назад +3

      The train driver won't see the people on the tracks in time but he will notice the fat man falling and getting run over and stop the train

  • @ushakova3101
    @ushakova3101 Год назад +49

    I feel like uninvolvement is never an option in these trolley problems. If the visual representation is anything to consider, the stand-in for you is already holding onto the lever, meaning that you have involved yourself already

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад +13

      The moment you comprehend the situation that you're in you're involved
      Some people will not have time to react and no shame should be put on them

    • @idarkstarx6939
      @idarkstarx6939 5 месяцев назад

      Diffusion of responsibility.

  • @charlesmartin1972
    @charlesmartin1972 Год назад +1721

    My favorite meme variant of the trolley problem is as follows:
    Sisyphus is pushing a boulder along the track to Hilbert's Grand Hotel; as it contains an infinite number of guests, they might not be able to accommodate Sisyphus or his boulder; you have the option to divert Sisyphus onto another track, at the end of which is the Ship of Theseus, which would be destroyed by the boulder. Is Sisyphus happy?

    • @jackdaleggett7184
      @jackdaleggett7184 Год назад +67

      I know this one! No!

    • @ichigo_nyanko
      @ichigo_nyanko Год назад +268

      Dont divert and he will be happy, Hilberts hotel will have enough room. Just ask everyone in room n to move to room n+1 (so the person in room 1 goes to 2, 2 goes to 3, and so on), then Sisyphus and Co. gets room 1.

    • @BLUEGENE13
      @BLUEGENE13 Год назад +63

      Haha I know philosophy words

    • @pleasegoawaydude
      @pleasegoawaydude Год назад

      @@BLUEGENE13 you seem dumb.

    • @untitledboardgamechannel
      @untitledboardgamechannel Год назад +90

      I saw it as Sisyphus is rolling a boulder towards Monty Hall, who has 4 doors. The first is the grand hotel with infinite guests. The second is the ship of theseus. The third is Schrodinger's Cat, and sisyphus' boulder would destroy the box, causing the cat to be observed. The fourth is another Sisyphus going through the monty hall problem, and the boulder would put that Sisyphus out of his misery, though forcing the old one to do a second problem. Is Sisyphus happy?

  • @doomshroom7682
    @doomshroom7682 Год назад +539

    "If you choose
    not to decide
    you still have made a choice"
    -- Neil Peart

    • @pizzaeater8905
      @pizzaeater8905 Год назад +2

      I'm pretty sure that was Getty Lee that said that.

    • @benjaminseelig8675
      @benjaminseelig8675 Год назад +3

      @@pizzaeater8905makes sense, but Neil actually wrote all the lyrics in Yes

    • @doomshroom7682
      @doomshroom7682 Год назад +13

      @@pizzaeater8905 I debated this but Neil did write the lyric. I've always listened to Rush for the genius songwriting.

    • @pizzaeater8905
      @pizzaeater8905 Год назад +2

      Fair point. I knew the song (somewhat), but I didn't know that fact.

    • @RabblesTheBinx
      @RabblesTheBinx Год назад

      @@benjaminseelig8675 I'm pretty sure that Neil Peart did _not,_ in fact, write all of the lyrics for Yes. Rush, sure, but he wasn't even _in_ Yes, and, y'know, Steve Howe, Chris Squire, and Jon Anderson.

  • @bipolarprobe
    @bipolarprobe Год назад +61

    I understand that the fat man trolley variant is supposed to exist in philosophical ideals where you know for absolute certain that not only will you be able to push the man onto the track, but that his body will in fact stop the trolley before it can harm anyone else. My hesitation with that version has always come down to those details.

    • @Printerpenguin
      @Printerpenguin 8 месяцев назад +6

      Yeah, like what if you push him but you couldn't do it fast enough and now 6 people died because he was pushed off the bridge after the trolley passed

    • @kieranwhyte714
      @kieranwhyte714 7 месяцев назад +17

      Imagine pushing a fat guy of a bridge watching him get splattered with the other 5 and trying to explain that to literally anyone why you thought it would work.

    • @ragegaze3482
      @ragegaze3482 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@Printerpenguin it's a hypothetical bro, it's going to stop the train. Thinking anything other than yes or no is just your mind trying to make a workaround the problem so you don't have actively think about it. It's your brain coping over having to choose

    • @plugshirt1762
      @plugshirt1762 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@ragegaze3482not really lol in the hypothetical scenario I would push him every day of the week but in reality there is no guarantee that would for any reason stop a train so there is no real scenario where it makes sense to do so

  • @jeremiahmorin1867
    @jeremiahmorin1867 Год назад +39

    That ad transition was genuinely one of the best I've ever seen. I legit thought it was another trolley problem at first

  • @WinterPains
    @WinterPains Год назад +761

    What I like about the trolley problem is the fact that no matter what I ultimately think the more moral action is, I still have no idea how I'd respond if put in that situation.

    • @romano-britishmedli7407
      @romano-britishmedli7407 Год назад +143

      There was actually a real-life experiment done by Vsauce (with a mere visual simulation of people working on the track using monitors, and the unsuspecting participants being mentally cared for immediately afterwards, of course). The real-life solution was that most people would just freeze out of fear of responsibility and do nothing.

    • @DMZZ_DZDM
      @DMZZ_DZDM 8 месяцев назад +11

      That's actually the original intent of the thought experiment

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles 7 месяцев назад +12

      I’d probably panic and forget to make a decision

    • @DavidJJJ
      @DavidJJJ 6 месяцев назад

      I like the fact that you are not responsible for murder, so you are not morally culpable.

    • @ekhowo1475
      @ekhowo1475 6 месяцев назад

      @@52flyingbicyclesI’d start the multitrack drifting variation somehow

  • @TheBobblefighter
    @TheBobblefighter Год назад +264

    My favourite one is 'There is no one on the track, but you can pull the lever to bring the trolley closer to you so you can wave to all the people'

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles 7 месяцев назад +18

      BUT they will be late to their destination. They won’t know you were the one who made them late. But you’ll know.

  • @benwebb4424
    @benwebb4424 8 месяцев назад +25

    Late to the party, but problem 2 is actually interesting from the other angle too. If you are the person at the lever, pulling it before the fat man gets pushed off means you also potentially save the fat man. The person on the bridge could still shove the fat man off to save the 1 person but in pulling the lever early you force them to evaluate one person's life over another person's life while alleviating yourself of having to make that decision.

    • @ragegaze3482
      @ragegaze3482 7 месяцев назад +3

      truee didn't even think of that, assuming the guy on the bridge can tell which tracks the guy switches it too, the more morally correct thing to do is just whoever pushes or pulls the lever the fastest, since hesitating until the other person chooses puts all the responsibility on the other person. The ideal scenario would therefore be that the guy on the bridge pushes the fat guy and the guy on the ground pull the lever at the same time. They both picked the optimal decision at the same moment.

  • @tomsmurf4225
    @tomsmurf4225 Год назад +21

    One trolley problem I like is one where you see a runaway trolley heading towards a trolley problem scenario, but the lever to switch tracks is really far away and the only way to reach the lever in time is to use a teleporter. But if you use the teleporter, will it still be _you_ pulling the lever?

  • @jeromefournier9667
    @jeromefournier9667 Год назад +414

    For the loop problem I'd leave... I'm the only one staying alive in this situation so I REALLY should avoid traumatising myself by seeing six people being brutaly run over by a trolley.

    • @MrMpakobec
      @MrMpakobec Год назад +24

      I think CosmicSceptic is wrong in his assessment of the 5th problem. You should totally pull the lever and kill one person first. Mental suffering from seen someone die is far less "bad" in comparison to actually dying. Everybody dies and question is how soon. If you can postpone 5 minds from stopping existing rather than one you should certainly do it. If still not convinced imagine we start modifying conditions. From the picture we could assume that death of one group will follow after another in 5-15 seconds. What if the loop was 3 hours long? 1 day? Month? Year? That is why I think rational thing to do is to pull the lever - you can not predict the future and so maybe this 5 people will somehow survive.

    • @Azriel_MR
      @Azriel_MR Год назад +7

      @@MrMpakobec i disagree.

    • @tommysalami420
      @tommysalami420 Год назад +29

      @@MrMpakobec Damn making them suffer knowing their inevitable fate. They are tied up you would be forcing 5 people to be tortured for longer. As opposed to letting one person go through that torture.

    • @MrMpakobec
      @MrMpakobec Год назад +2

      @@tommysalami420 For me bad existing is almost infinitely better than nice nothingness (unless all you feel pain so intensive that world around you stop existing). The fact that 5 people will see death of one is nothing compare to their own death and they have some time to do things. They can say something or communicate in other way. If there were no meaningful time delay between deaths of the groups there would be no choice you could make and no trolley problem.

    • @justcomments1239
      @justcomments1239 Год назад

      @@tommysalami420 I don’t know maybe it would be more time to come to peace with what’s going to happen & gather thoughts

  • @SouthernersSax
    @SouthernersSax Год назад +619

    My personal favorite version of this meme is one called the "Prisoner's Trolley Problemma"
    (picture three parallel tracks)
    A trolley full of your loved ones is heading down the tracks and will hit another loved one. If you redirect it, it will hit three strangers, but all of your loved ones will be fine. However, there is another person on the other side of the tracks facing the same problem. If you both choose to redirect the trolleys, they will crash in the middle, killing almost everyone.

    • @oxirane0143
      @oxirane0143 Год назад +97

      Ooh thats a spicy crossover!

    • @elmerandrewcrowley2822
      @elmerandrewcrowley2822 Год назад +68

      reminds me of the dark knight. two boats full of people have been loaded with bombs primed to blow. the detonator for the bombs is with the people on the other boat. One boat is full of innocents and the other convicted criminals.

    • @dairoleon2682
      @dairoleon2682 Год назад +11

      I would pull the lever. I don't understand anyone who wouldn't. What's the point of having loved ones if you wouldn't risk everything to protect them? You're always gambling on other people's intentions just by existing. There is no excuse not to take an active role in the well-being of the people close to you.

    • @elmerandrewcrowley2822
      @elmerandrewcrowley2822 Год назад +8

      @@dairoleon2682 100% agree. have faith that others will do good and don't ever accept responsibility for when they don't.

    • @TriStain69
      @TriStain69 Год назад +49

      @@dairoleon2682 The thing is that there's not only one of your loved ones on the track you're going down, there are multiple of your loved ones ON THE TROLLEY. So if both sides choose to redirect it to hit the strangers, both sides are losing their loved ones AND the strangers. That's the thing about the Prisoner's Dilemma, it's a complicated test of social cooperation. The choice with the least casualties to loved ones would be if one side chooses to hit their one loved one and the other side chooses to hit the strangers. But neither side is going to WANT to be the one that hits their one loved one... but both sides choosing to divert means even MORE loss to loved ones. So it's a game of "Who's gonna take a smaller sacrifice so that neither of us has to take a bigger sacrifice?" except with no communication between them

  • @jasonrieder743
    @jasonrieder743 Год назад +32

    There has always been a third solution. If your quick enough you can pull the lever right as the front wheels pass over the fork forcing the back of the trolley into a seperate track breaking the trolley and saving everyone.

    • @RabblesTheBinx
      @RabblesTheBinx Год назад +10

      Unless there are people on the trolley...

    • @altosack
      @altosack 11 месяцев назад +8

      You might want to read about the Kobayashi Maru, originally described in _Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan._ You’re given an impossible scenario to see how you handle it; cheating the system says a lot about you, and therefore still makes it a valuable exercise.

  • @jessesleight9631
    @jessesleight9631 Год назад +4

    That VPN segue was the most iconic/dad-joke-style segue I've ever seen.

  • @Huvpalto
    @Huvpalto Год назад +177

    «you can stop the trolley at any time, but then the saved people will make a party which you’ll have to attend and hang out and shake hands, etc»

    • @zygoat2369
      @zygoat2369 Год назад +34

      That's it they're all dead

    • @faveless
      @faveless Год назад +10

      Free food so yes

    • @jeroctuber
      @jeroctuber Год назад +5

      The two types of men right here

  • @Dutch_bastard_23
    @Dutch_bastard_23 Год назад +978

    We don't have to solve it. That kid from that meme solved it by placing the one human with the other ones and then crashing into the pile of humans

    • @Danny-kk4nj
      @Danny-kk4nj Год назад

      Love that video, kids are absolute psychopaths 😂

    • @reeceb1259
      @reeceb1259 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/-N_RZJUAQY4/видео.html
      🧑‍🤝‍🧑🧑‍🤝‍🧑🧑‍🤝‍🧑🚂💨

    • @Reverend_Salem
      @Reverend_Salem Год назад +106

      i ptefer multi track drifting

    • @romainsavioz5466
      @romainsavioz5466 Год назад +14

      Or his sister's way

    • @robinthebobin6537
      @robinthebobin6537 Год назад +24

      Omg yes I saw that video yesterday, that kid has truly worked out morality😂

  • @ssjcrafter8842
    @ssjcrafter8842 Год назад +5

    11:55 I would definitely pull the lever if the brain wouldn't die, but only experience pain. if the brain does die... maybe.

  • @kieru8106
    @kieru8106 Год назад +14

    on the simulation one, I think instead of weighing the value of simulated vs real, it's weighing the value of whether or not you want the person to live after experiencing the event, being mangled by a train would be an incredibly traumatic experience especially if you would have died from it, while if you're dead you don't have to deal with that

    • @connoryoung8951
      @connoryoung8951 Год назад

      My thoughts exactly… however I then thought if u are able to convince them that the simulation is real then you could probably convince them the trauma was not and maybe even force them to forget it

    • @kieru8106
      @kieru8106 Год назад +1

      @@connoryoung8951 forcing someone to forget trauma would probably cause more trauma and would eventually be remembered, I don't think thinking up theoretical "outs" is a part of it, cause then why don't I just flip the lever and save the one person before the train gets there in the original problem

    • @connoryoung8951
      @connoryoung8951 Год назад

      @@kieru8106 u need to remember it is not physically forcing them but masking previous memories, imagine u woke up and all ur memories had been replaced, u wouldnt know the difference

    • @connoryoung8951
      @connoryoung8951 Год назад

      @@kieru8106 and u cant out run a train...

    • @kieru8106
      @kieru8106 Год назад

      @@connoryoung8951 if it's far enough away from the people tied to the tracks you can, it's just not in the spirit of the question. Your justification for holds the same weight as "we'll just freeze the bodies and revive them once technology reaches that point" in my opinion

  • @ongoingplague3148
    @ongoingplague3148 Год назад +250

    My favorite is the hedonist's trolley problem. "You can pull the lever to redirect the trolley and save five people, but you won't get to see the trolley do the totally sick loop-de-loop"

  • @Somber_Knight
    @Somber_Knight Год назад +439

    You are driving a trolley blindfolded and can't stop, but can switch tracks. Though you don't know the remainder of the dilemma, on one track is a ship where each of its original pieces has been replaced, and on the other is a ship made from the original pieces. One of the ships belongs to Theseus, who will be mad if you destroy his ship. He stands off to the side and controls another trolley which is coming down in the opposite direction. He plans to use that trolley as a kamikaze if you anger him, which you will not survive. Therefore, until observed and a conclusion to Theseus's ship problem can be made, Theseus's ship is a form of Schrodinger's cat, being in a state of will and won't be destroyed simultaneously. There is however, a third track, though once you decide which track to take, you learn the third one would simply run off a cliff and guarantee your death, yet you can still choose to switch to another track. If you switch though and Theseus does too, then that lets on a third trolley full of innocents that wind up on the third track, killing them all. Though Theseus does not know about the third trolley, two sisters on the third trolley can read his mind and knows that Theseus will ultimately do the opposite of whatever either of them predicts, except one always tells the truth and the other always lies. Given an infinite amount of time to decide, can you determine what answer one of the sisters thinks you should do if you could ask one of them a single question?
    This is Schrodinger's and Theseus's three-door two-guard cat ship trolley prisoner halting problem.

    • @fredman727
      @fredman727 Год назад +80

      Mixing all the sodas together

    • @U20E0
      @U20E0 Год назад +11

      icosagon

    • @sorsocksfake
      @sorsocksfake 8 месяцев назад +31

      The "you don't know the remainder of the dilemma" part kinda prevents acting. Without that though, you should ask the sister what her sister would say Theseus would do if we switched (main) tracks.
      If she answers "he will not switch", that means either she lies and her sister predicts he would, or, she speaks the truth and her sister would lie knowing that he would. Therefore the other track must contain Theseus, and we should stay our course to hit an empty ship.
      If however she answers "he will switch", then by the same logic, this track must contain Theseus and so we should switch to the other track. Since Theseus would do the opposite of the prediction, he will not switch, therefore we again just hit the empty ship and nobody dies.
      ...I think?

    • @kkkbuta5
      @kkkbuta5 7 месяцев назад +9

      this is brilliant

    • @Mangotherango57
      @Mangotherango57 6 месяцев назад +23

      I want to report this for war crimes

  • @drycrest847
    @drycrest847 6 месяцев назад +4

    i like the one that says “you’re the creator of this trolly problem. if the 5 people admit you’re the creator, you set them free. are you evil?”

    • @godgetti
      @godgetti Месяц назад

      I feel like you are really asking a different question

  • @Takyodor2
    @Takyodor2 8 месяцев назад +9

    I think the fact that it is more obvious that "pulling the lever" will "solve" the problem, compared to "pushing someone in front of the trolley" plays a part in the longer thinking time.
    You kind of have to figure out if it actually is the same problem first (in reality, it seems unlikely that pushing someone in front of a trolley would actually stop it), but since it's part of the problem definition, you have to accept it. You have to image that you are part of the scenario, and pretend that you somehow _know_ that pushing the man will save the others.

  • @DilonMoodley
    @DilonMoodley Год назад +518

    At the end of problem 5 i like how alex said with such confidence and with an almost happy expression on his face that "id allow the train to run over the 5 and then run over the 1" 😂 like hes happy that the people get run over. 😂

    • @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja
      @Tommuli_Haudankaivaja Год назад

      Why wouldn't he be, they are all rapist after all.

    • @FranXiT
      @FranXiT Год назад +13

      Technically he should be! He made the right moral decision to minimize suffering!

    • @lazaar6341
      @lazaar6341 Год назад +1

      I thought it was interesting that he never even considered the trauma of the person that pulled the level. It’s true that if they do nothing everyone still dies, but the act of pulling the level means they are killing five people first before the one. The person pulling the level has to live the rest of their life with that. Not saying he was wrong but I believe it’s something to take into consideration.

    • @FranXiT
      @FranXiT Год назад +1

      @@lazaar6341 choosing to do nothing is still a choice.

    • @madman7544
      @madman7544 Год назад

      But the one person in the end would be the one who dies last and and alone. So I would choose him first.

  • @fritzskrivvens8727
    @fritzskrivvens8727 Год назад +92

    Obviously the takeaway here is that I need to get really fat. Then I can sacrifice myself to avoid any trolley problems.

  • @elmerandrewcrowley2822
    @elmerandrewcrowley2822 Год назад +10

    One thing that this video didn’t talk about and i haven’t seen mentioned anywhere else either is the burden of inaction. You can be held accountable for actions you take that cause harm, but I also believe that you can be held accountable for actions that you willingly don’t take that cause harm. This would relate to things like Good Samaritan Laws in that they try to encourage people to act rather than not in times of need. I’m not sure if there is an already existing belief system that includes this or not but i’d love to hear about it.

  • @lizzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
    @lizzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz Год назад +7

    Genuinely I think the implausibility of one fat dude somehow being able to stop a runaway trolley also affects peoples answers. I know that you're supposed to just take for granted that it will, but *instinctively* it feels like it wouldn't work, and that plants another seed of doubt

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад

      The person that made that variant is living in a weird fat phobic cartoon ...

  • @LuxLoser
    @LuxLoser Год назад +776

    My take on the Fatman Problem Vs Trolley problem (for anyone who cares): In a trolley problem, the individual tied to the second track is, even if they are not chosen to die, still “involved” in the calamity at hand. They are bound to the track. Perhaps they have to watch the 5 die for their safety, or maybe they are unaware of what’s happening. They are still a major component of the tragedy and moral dilemma. But the Fatman is as uninvolved you. He’s just a bystander. In fact, he’s even less involved, as he has no one to push to stop the train. He could contemplate suicide to save the others, but that is his separate moral dilemma. For you, to push the Fatman is to involve a previous uninvolved party in the situation, removing all of their agency in the situation. Those on the tracks have no agency. They are at your mercy. The Fatman has agency, and begins as someone who is not a part of the problem. Thus pushing him caries vastly more ethical weight than pulling a lever.

    • @regular_bee
      @regular_bee Год назад +146

      I love this analysis omg. It reminds me of the "variation" where instead of a trolley, a doctor has 5 patients who need different organ transplants and if they don’t get them soon they'll die, there aren't organs available at the moment for their procedures. A healthy patient comes up for a check up and their organs happen to match(? the organs that each of the other patients need. If you sacrificed this one patient to save these 5 lives, would it be morally better than letting this healthy patient live and leave and let the 5 patients die? I always thought that it would be better to not sacrifice the healthy person but wasn't sure about how to explain it, and I think your explanation also applies. The healthy patient is a by-stander, and no one goes to the doctor expecting to die to save other lifes

    • @bookbook9495
      @bookbook9495 Год назад +56

      @@regular_bee this can be further complicated if the healthy patient is suicidal or has family

    • @mateoferretto2175
      @mateoferretto2175 Год назад +61

      I've always thought of it as a cause-consequence difference.
      In the trolley, saving 5 people causes 1 person to die
      In the fatman killing 1 person causes 5 to be saved.
      From a numbers standpoint, it's the same. but from an ethical one its not (to me at least)

    • @LuxLoser
      @LuxLoser Год назад +36

      @@mateoferretto2175 That's also valid. The act of saving lives, with one death as a consequence, is very different ethically than the act of killing someone to save others as a consequence.

    • @bookbook9495
      @bookbook9495 Год назад +15

      @@mateoferretto2175 I think of it more as prioritizing vs acting. You prioritize the 5 people, but it’s a question of how much you’re willing to act. Pushing both the lever and the fat man IS killing somebody, but the question is whether or not to involve the fat man or if you can even justify it in real life.

  • @m3gasn1p3r
    @m3gasn1p3r Год назад +436

    i think the biggest issue with claiming the fat-man push is the same as the lever pull is that in the lever-pull scenario, all characters are already ingrained in the scenario regardless of your involvement, and in the scenario where you literally push a non-tied person onto the tracks, you are sure, potentially saving 5, but in doing so you are essentially throwing another bystander, like yourself, into the fray as a sacrifice to do so.

    • @terpsidance.
      @terpsidance. Год назад +49

      It's interesting to me also because if we assume that simply throwing someone in front of the train will stop it, than we can also assume that we could throw ourselves in front of the train to stop it, making it so that the single sacrifice is a willing one.

    • @080000abcdef
      @080000abcdef Год назад +44

      My thoughts always run along these lines: In the case of the lever, you are the only one who can choose, even if you can communicate with the people on the track, you're the only one who can act in the last second. If, however, you're in a position to push the fat man off the bridge, surely he is also in a position to jump. In the former, you are the only possible actor, however in the latter, by acting, you deny another who has more stake in the issue the chance to act, or not, for himself.

    • @mia-MIA-mia
      @mia-MIA-mia Год назад +24

      @@terpsidance. I think that’s why he is fat, u are not big enough to derail it.

    • @terpsidance.
      @terpsidance. Год назад +18

      @@mia-MIA-mia yeah I get the implication but it makes it a poorly constructed thought experiment that relies on too many unknowable variables.

    • @Buphido
      @Buphido Год назад +22

      I would argue that the man tied on the branching track is also not ingrained in the scenario. He is tied to train tracks which, if not for your involvement, would be perfectly safe to be tied to. Just as the bridge should be a perfectly safe place to stand on. Meanwhile it is those five that, either due to their own poor decisions or due to their relation to a malicious third party, have ended up on the tracks. And so it is your action to save the firmly involved five that involves these otherwise uninvolved bystanders.

  • @GreyLightning
    @GreyLightning Год назад +37

    For the fourth problem, I feel like you have to also consider the individual wishes of each person, wether they want to be traumatized or die later

    • @connoryoung8951
      @connoryoung8951 Год назад +1

      Also that u are there too so u. can choose to witness the deaths or not and decide if ur involved or not

    • @nintendo2000
      @nintendo2000 Год назад +2

      yeah trauma sucks but at least in this case probably not comparable to death

    • @52flyingbicycles
      @52flyingbicycles 7 месяцев назад +1

      Honestly, if I’m about to get run over by a trolley it’s not going to make a huge difference if I see it happen to someone else seconds before. I’m going down anyway. I could always just close my eyes

    • @butast6520
      @butast6520 6 месяцев назад +1

      the brains only rwality will be the simultation on the track the simulation for the brain will always be that it’s stuck to a track so your taking it out of its misery by pulling the lever.

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@butast6520the fact that it's probably not the computer that is making it ''alive'' and the magic liquid that it is in it would just ''pass out'' until it is rewired to a simulation or a person since there's magic liquid it must be possible
      There's basically no dillema at this one who is going to save a computer over a person ? I love computers but ciao

  • @newcantinacrispychickentac7754
    @newcantinacrispychickentac7754 Год назад +4

    11:43 he's spitting bars

  • @Ao5pXB
    @Ao5pXB Год назад +179

    I like to imagine being in the trolley problem then having to explain and your choice afterwards

    • @drichmo
      @drichmo Год назад +10

      Didn’t vsauce do this?

    • @darkdjinniumbrage7798
      @darkdjinniumbrage7798 Год назад +2

      I like imagining being in the trolley problem and hoping the guy pulls the lever to kill me

    • @Ao5pXB
      @Ao5pXB Год назад +1

      @@darkdjinniumbrage7798 that's dark ngl

    • @darkdjinniumbrage7798
      @darkdjinniumbrage7798 Год назад

      @@Ao5pXB thanks I'm not well

  • @dungeonmasters4
    @dungeonmasters4 Год назад +471

    I love how when explaining the trauma you act as though you're not traumatizing yourself

    • @StarshadowMelody
      @StarshadowMelody Год назад +40

      I mean you're one lot of six dead people trauma no matter what in that instance, so, you're a non-variable beyond deciding who dies first.

    • @maimonguy123
      @maimonguy123 Год назад +12

      @@StarshadowMelody wrong, it's because he would enjoy it

    • @dungeonmasters4
      @dungeonmasters4 Год назад +7

      @@maimonguy123 💀reminds me of that meme where they explain how you can kill all people

    • @Drone_21
      @Drone_21 Год назад

      @@StarshadowMelody just leave before the troley hits them?

    • @realtimestatic
      @realtimestatic Год назад +2

      Also you could also say you shouldn’t put the burden of extra trauma on one individual in exchange for the trauma of others because it’s not fair to let one individual Cary the burden of everyone

  • @ScintillatingSusie
    @ScintillatingSusie Год назад +6

    Something with Problem Four: You can actually save an extra person like this. You only pull the second lever. Because the different tracks being connected would stop the Trolley

  • @ryandeberry5122
    @ryandeberry5122 Год назад +8

    Honestly, I really like your thinking process. Explaining it outloud, I felt my opinion shift a couple times in the same situation but I am more set in the stance than if I didn't take the time to listen. Great content!

  • @garyhughes1664
    @garyhughes1664 Год назад +364

    ‘Status quo bias’. What a great criticism of Robert Nozick’s Experience Machine. Never heard of this one before. Enjoyed the examples of the trolley problem, some of which were new to me, like the brain in the vat version. As usual, wonderfully presented by Alex.

    • @Lamster66
      @Lamster66 Год назад +1

      ‘Status quo bias’.
      Yeah
      Whatever you want!

    • @lebeccthecomputer6158
      @lebeccthecomputer6158 Год назад +5

      The situation he’s describing is just the Truman show lol

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 Год назад +1

      I think Nozick is full of it. I would enter the machine pretty much immediately. Before he even says "but it will be fake"; you already had me at "better than your current situation."

    • @raionik1202
      @raionik1202 Год назад

      @@troodon1096 even if its means never seeing your family or friends again?

    • @Lamster66
      @Lamster66 Год назад +1

      @@raionik1202
      All the more reason.
      I don't remember who said it only that they were blind
      But on being asked during an interview if they felt bad about loosing their sight replied.
      On the contrary since I went blind every woman i've slept with looked exactly like Marilyn Monroe

  • @joenathan8059
    @joenathan8059 Год назад +54

    The real question is who keeps putting people on the rail?

    • @JustinSwell
      @JustinSwell Год назад +8

      I think it’s a mind in a vat.

    • @joenathan8059
      @joenathan8059 Год назад +4

      @@JustinSwell thx Obama

    • @emilymathis4237
      @emilymathis4237 Год назад +2

      Fr maybe we could just put a stop to them instead of worrying about the levers lol

  • @OnePieceOBleach
    @OnePieceOBleach Год назад +23

    I think that in the case of the trolley problem, once someone becomes aware of the situation and has the means to do something about they become involved in the situation regardless of the desire not to be. So the idea that someone “choosing not to involve themselves” seems incredibly off to me.

    • @ragegaze3482
      @ragegaze3482 7 месяцев назад +9

      yea it's a cope in order for people to be complacent imo. There's no way you aren't involved at that point, the decision has no risk to the person pulling the lever and takes no effort either. Not making a decision is a decision on it's own.

    • @plugshirt1762
      @plugshirt1762 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@ragegaze3482yeah it doesn’t matter how uninvolved you want to pretend you are you’re actively choosing to let five people die whether you want to act that way or not. To be honest in the one scenario he posed I find the man pulling the lever to kill a man a far better person because the other person killed five people and found a way to pretend they had no involvement. Unfortunately though that’s how it works in the law too though. If you see someone drawing and are holding a life jacket but decide to just walk away the law doesn’t consider you to have done anything wrong even though you actively chose to kill a man

  • @1redeye_
    @1redeye_ 5 месяцев назад +2

    after 2 months with this video being recommended to me almost daily i finally decided to watch it. And i must say i regret nothing. Good stuff mate

  • @stevebarnes2
    @stevebarnes2 Год назад +228

    The railway geek in me would like to point out that, in the illustration for the trolley problem, the position of the lever indicates that the points are already set for the one person track.

    • @Unsensitive
      @Unsensitive Год назад +11

      Knowing this:
      Presuming the person didn't note this. This person pushed another person off the bridge to stop a train;
      Still 1 person died, but their decision lead to which person.
      Would you find their action to push or not more or less moral?
      Would you find this person more or less responsible for the harm they caused or didn't cause?

    • @cubonefan3
      @cubonefan3 Год назад +2

      @@Unsensitive yes

    • @10thletter40
      @10thletter40 Год назад +1

      ​@@Unsensitive They are an idiot assuming a fat man can stop the trolley. It was a risk they shouldn't have taken whether it worked or not 😅

    • @multi-purposebiped7419
      @multi-purposebiped7419 Год назад +1

      Interesting twist. Then the actor has either already acted to sacrifice the one or is about to act to save the one at the expense of the five.

    • @ziwuri
      @ziwuri Год назад +7

      I know you probably know this, but that's not really the point. Pushing a fat man in front of the trolley wouldn't stop it with 100% certainty. Depending on the trolley's speed, in problem 5, it could potentially get derailed before making it around the U-turn. But we're to leave these factors out when discussing these problems.

  • @Choedron
    @Choedron Год назад +216

    I have been in almost exactly same situation in real life. I was waiting at the Footscray train station, in Melbourne, when three guys came walking on the tracks and one driving a small tractor on the track. They were picking up metal plates and garbage, which were spread along the track. I remember I was looking at this unusual behaviour and was wondering if they knew the time of the express train, which soon would drive through. Meanwhile they had reached the far end of the station, where the track run over a small bridge, at the same time of the train, which came hurdling through. The men all jumped over the bridge rail and the train hit the tractor and was lifted several meters up in the air. Everything was a mess afterwards. I stopped thinking and started acting - looking for injured people. Fortunately the train was empty of any people but the driver. He only got minor injuries. The four workers saved their own lives because they jumped off the small bridge. Everything happened so fast, that I never got to the thought of warning the men on the track. You do not have time to contemplate your moral choices in these kinds of situations. Either you act instinctively or you freeze.

    • @resir9807
      @resir9807 Год назад +49

      I think most people are aware reality would look different. I always answer that I'd divert the trolley AND push the fat man to save 5, morally speaking, but in real life, the psychological barrier to push someone would be too high, I couldn't do it.

    • @10thletter40
      @10thletter40 Год назад +17

      ​@@resir9807 Personally I say I could flip the switch, but I could never push the fat man. In the first case, someone dies no matter what, in the second case, someone dies no matter what. However, the sacrifice is entirely different. It would be like during a rainstorm, letting a wallet fall in a grate to save 5 others swept away in water, the second scenario with the fat man says you need to kick the wallet in to the grate to save the 5 wallets.
      All bound people and the train are part of a closed system. but the fat man doesn't feel like a part of the system, they just happened to be here.

    • @resir9807
      @resir9807 Год назад +20

      @@10thletter40 I don't think it's anything to do with the structure of the problem, I just think physicallly pushing someone to their death is just not something most of us are psychologically capable of

    • @lazuliartz1296
      @lazuliartz1296 Год назад +11

      ​@@resir9807 For me at least, pushing someone to their death feels a lot more personal than pulling a lever and having someone die. And I think that's the hang up for most people.
      I guess it's similar to why shooting someone with a gun is a lot different then stabbing someone. The gun puts distance, both physically and mechanically, between you and the person who is injured or killed (and it's the same with the lever).

    • @resir9807
      @resir9807 Год назад

      @@lazuliartz1296 agreed

  • @michaelvaller
    @michaelvaller 6 месяцев назад +5

    The brain in the vat doesn't seem to be affected by the destruction of the trolley, so it will likely, or at least possibly, survive in the end. And even though it's experience is going to be unpleasant to say the least, the fact that it survives is worth saving the real persons life (in my opinion)

  • @maneloliveira5687
    @maneloliveira5687 Год назад +21

    Another thing to consider for the third problem is will the brain survive? And, if so, can it be conneted to a different computer and continue on living it's simmulated reality? Also, would it retain it's memory and it's identity? Because if yes then it would be a pretty easy choice since it would really just be feeling the pain of being run over by the train but would be alright afterwards

    • @RainBwateur
      @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад

      My interpretation of the picture is that either the brain is powered by the computer or it's magic liquid that is powering it
      But in the two ways killing it over the person attached it the best way
      I'd rather think the brain is powered by magic liquid so it can be in another reality more charming that this one lol

  • @domcurkio3228
    @domcurkio3228 Год назад +152

    I’d say that the amount of trauma each person experiences doesn’t matter if they only experience it for a couple seconds. Now if you make the loop take a week, that’s a good trolley problem right there

    • @xavierburval4128
      @xavierburval4128 Год назад +25

      If the loop takes a week you can probably untie everyone else from the track, in which case I’m going for the one person.

  • @seanpeery7780
    @seanpeery7780 Год назад +310

    Other good Trolley Problems:
    - The Friend Dilemma; 1 person you like vs 5 people you dislike.
    - The Quantum Trolley(fate dilemma); the lever is in a super position and you don't know which track it will take unless you intervene.
    - The Abraham Lever; The Trolley is headed for 1 person, but you hear what to you is indisputably the voice of God offering you whatever evidence you need to accept their divinity, they tell you to redirect it to kill the 5 people.
    - Theoretical Genocide; One one track is one person, on the other is a Tron computer with with the only copy of an entire species of sentient programs. Do you value one of your own vs a species of purely computer originated life forms.
    - The Devil You Know; Someone evil, perhaps the literal incarnation of evil, is on the tracks and you can pull the brakes and keep them alive. Or, you can do nothing and let pure evil persist. The catch of doing nothing, something else will fill this vacuum and gain whatever powers the old embodiment of evil had. What they will do with that evil power, you know not.
    - The Ol' Swapper-O; This trolley problem was set up by an Dick Dasterdly. You can't untie anyone, cuz he's gots himself a gun. You are allowed to swap two people. Do you switch one person with another to 'optimize' who lives and who dies?

    • @EyeOfEld
      @EyeOfEld Год назад

      The last one is easy! Put Dick Dastardly in the spot of the one guy and pull the lever.

    • @Aikano9
      @Aikano9 Год назад +16

      obviously save the one I know.
      don’t touch it.
      Nah I don’t touch it.
      Genocide it is.
      Pure evil is pure evil. it won’t change just because who holds the pure evil trait changes. I do nothing.
      Depends on who is on the track, someone I know and/or like? Yes I will save them. None i know and/or like? I do nothing

    • @jevinliu4658
      @jevinliu4658 Год назад +3

      ​@Tech Priestess Micaela
      2nd: I presume so. I haven't heard of that many one-directional levers
      3rd: Presumably there's a good reason, it's God after all
      5th: At least we know about this evil and could figure out how to counter it, we won't know about a future evil.

    • @_dekinci
      @_dekinci Год назад +5

      Assuming no consequinces other than trauma for me:
      1 keep the one I like
      2 move it to 1 person (btw you can just say random, super position is kinda overkill here)
      3 as by my beliefs God is omnipotent, to prove it's divinity I ask it to make me omnipotent as well, use ultimate wisdom to assess why do I need to choose 5 people, make my own decision, live happy life forever after
      4 Save programs
      5 Stop the trolley. It is easier to control known evil
      6 Swap Dick Dasterdly with a single person, run him over

    • @danielturner1891
      @danielturner1891 Год назад +7

      @@_dekinci I feel like you’re just avoiding the problem for number 3. It’s not “plus get one superpower!” It’s “water evidence is required”. As in. You KNOW it’s God and the question is, do you pull despite not understanding.

  • @CreepersNeedHugs
    @CreepersNeedHugs 8 месяцев назад +2

    0:27 it says something about you when 40 of your friends like the group dedicated to trolley problem memes

  • @RainBwateur
    @RainBwateur 6 месяцев назад +1

    I had a ton of fun reading and replying to the comments the video was very interesting and the comments are perfect this was a very good experience thank you

  • @andibrema
    @andibrema Год назад +164

    17:29 love the pride in his voice announcing to brutally murder six people lmao

  • @boringturtle
    @boringturtle Год назад +643

    I would argue that taking 'no choice' is itself a choice. You're injected into the scenario from the moment that you're aware of it imo.

    • @idreadFell365
      @idreadFell365 Год назад +29

      That person still isn’t responsible for anyone’s life.

    • @falcongamer5867
      @falcongamer5867 Год назад +132

      It's the same as neglect

    • @holleey
      @holleey Год назад +124

      @@idreadFell365 idk about your country but here it's illegal to not provide first-aid when you witness an accident.
      it's true that the line of responsibility has to be drawn somewhere though.
      we cannot be blamed for not spending every waking second trying to rescue people.

    • @idreadFell365
      @idreadFell365 Год назад +24

      @@holleey that’s sounds totalitarian to me, to jail someone for not doing what you want. While some may not like it, there’s nothing objectively wrong with inaction and no one should feel obligated to do the moral thing. So yeah you don’t live in a free country.

    • @holleey
      @holleey Год назад +103

      @@idreadFell365 there's no such thing as a free country then. but laws are unrelated to the philosophy of morals in the first place.

  • @cyberneticbutterfly8506
    @cyberneticbutterfly8506 4 месяца назад +2

    It'd be interesting to see how people would feel about the matrix if Neo has a mother and father, a wife, a daughter, generally a warm and happy family, and has the choice of whether to take the blue or red pill.
    We never see any indication in the movie that he has any attachments to the world.

  • @sebastian8922
    @sebastian8922 5 месяцев назад +3

    That was a hell of a sponsor segment. Nice job lol

  • @missinglegs
    @missinglegs Год назад +279

    The fourth problem could also be interesting if there was another person operating the second split, so it's either you don't do anything and kill the one person, or you force another person to go through the trolley problem. Plus you can't be certain what they would do, they might not pull the lever, making it so that instead of just the 2 people on the track dying, 5 people who wouldn't even be involved had you not pulled the lever, will die

    • @averywicker3545
      @averywicker3545 Год назад +31

      wait this is actually really good fuck

    • @Svenu2
      @Svenu2 Год назад +30

      Thats almost the same as the fat man + lever example, except its lever + lever

    • @Biolo-G_KJ
      @Biolo-G_KJ Год назад +16

      Sounds like a prisoners dilemma.
      Do you trust the other person enough to make the same choice.

    • @MrGabrucho
      @MrGabrucho Год назад +4

      I don't know, the fact that you will force someone to go through the problem makes it easier to choose killing that one person. Doing differently makes you a coward. You force someone to go through the problem you decided to avoid. By choosing not to kill someone you force someone else to do it, or to allow 5 people to die. Feels like you're transferring the burden, but not really.

    • @DuctTapeJake
      @DuctTapeJake Год назад +8

      So you combine the Trolley Problem with the Prisoners Dilemma... do you just love suffering?

  • @Master_3530
    @Master_3530 Год назад +141

    I feel like having other people watch death with you would be less traumatic than watching it alone

    • @Jirodyne
      @Jirodyne Год назад +14

      I disagree, depending on how long the train takes. If it takes only a few seconds, the it doesn't matter the order, they died right after the other. But if it takes time. 5 mins. 10, 15? 30 minutes. However long it takes, 1 person freaking out is just himself and his grief. But 5 people will be freaking out, screaming and crying, and freaking out the OTHERS with them as well, making the fear even worse. The 1 person, could accept their deaths, go quiet, close their eyes, and pretend their going to go to sleep and everything will be ok. But with 5 people, someone is going to be wiggling, screaming and freaking out. There will be no calm, no quiet acceptance. Just pure chaos and madness right up to the death.

    • @KudoShinichii1412
      @KudoShinichii1412 Год назад +3

      Not true really
      But even so they all gonna die in the end so it doesn't really matter

    • @phantacarrytemari
      @phantacarrytemari Год назад +7

      I'm killing the 5 before the 1 so he feels a lil special before dying

    • @DragoonCenten
      @DragoonCenten Год назад +4

      Dragging people with you doesn't liberate you of your predicament.

    • @hossenkhaled8379
      @hossenkhaled8379 Год назад +3

      @@Jirodyne if it's gonna take 5 mins and you can't untie yourself or the person at the lever untie you then you have more reasons to scream than just the one person dying

  • @mrpinapples7901
    @mrpinapples7901 Год назад +3

    What if there’s 10 people tied up and you have the option to divert the rail. However the other rail leads into a brick wall. Without knowing how many people are on the trolly, what would be most rational and most moral?

  • @IfHighgateswereclimbable
    @IfHighgateswereclimbable Год назад +3

    I wonder what Alex's response to me saying "I'd just throw myself off the bridge to stop the trolley" would be

  • @tanjamartinsbur9283
    @tanjamartinsbur9283 Год назад +114

    Your answer to the third problem surprised me a lot. As I understood it, the brain-in-a-tank wouldn't actually die, but just experiencing the feeling of being run over by a train. So I thought the question was, would you rather a person die for real or have another person deal with the trauma of having experienced dying. (The problem could be adapted to having the "real" person being very old and the brain-in-a-tank being very young, thus making them have deal with that trauma for a long time vs. someone who was going to die soonish anyway.) Personally, I'd still pull the lever, but it'd be interesting to know if other people would do the same.

    • @yoeyyoey8937
      @yoeyyoey8937 Год назад +1

      Ofc you pull the lever 😂 the only way out of this is to know a bunch of impossible details such as whether or not the person can deal with the trauma or would have rather died

    • @RealElevenTimes
      @RealElevenTimes Год назад +4

      The problem says that the brain can recreate every single experience including terrible pain and death. I feel like if you simulate death then you die. I mean what else would an experience of dying be?

    • @ZentoBrinebg
      @ZentoBrinebg Год назад +18

      @@RealElevenTimes dying isn't an experice tho, it's a consequence. The brain will simulate the pain of being run over without the actual consequence of the damage said pain is caused by.

    • @RealElevenTimes
      @RealElevenTimes Год назад +4

      @@ZentoBrinebg Okay, but again the problem says that the brain can experience terrible pain and death. I feel like being run over by a car or in this instance a trolley would fall into the "terrible pain" category.
      I think the problem meant that if the brain was damaged enough in the simulation it would die.

    • @rachelpurity1
      @rachelpurity1 Год назад

      This reminds me of the autonomous car problem questionnaire.
      Brakes don't work and the car can either swerve or not swerve.
      If it swerves, it kills an old person, if it doesn't swerve it kills a young person.
      Making the choice based on age is morally wrong and sets an insane precedent akin to national socialist ideology, yet most defend that way of thinking.

  • @HexagonPankake
    @HexagonPankake Год назад +33

    Imagine, if you will, that you are watching 5 people tied to a trolley track from atop a bridge, helpless to stop this, and then some guy starts giving you a rather forceful back rub.

    • @Hackfruchtsalat
      @Hackfruchtsalat Год назад +2

      This sounds like it should be the intro to an Ephemeral Rift video :3

  • @definitlyEgirl-safetf2
    @definitlyEgirl-safetf2 7 месяцев назад +2

    The rather large man problem really shows how phylosophers dont know anything about trains

  • @theoverseer1775
    @theoverseer1775 Год назад

    The train: "Who the hell are you?"
    The guy I pushed off the bridge: "I'm Fatman"

  • @november666
    @november666 Год назад +27

    My favorite is the one where superman swoops in and stops the train before we have to make an ethical decision, thus saving us from the hell that is moral philosophy.

    • @NoFlu
      @NoFlu Год назад

      But wouldn't that lead to you relying on Superman to save you, thus creating the situation of what to do without him...

    • @muk_is_superior
      @muk_is_superior Год назад

      @@NoFlu Superman will always come to save us

  • @skepticusmaximus184
    @skepticusmaximus184 Год назад +25

    I was in a similar situation. I was walking alongside of a train track. There was a switch lever. On one track there was a large weevil that was destined to be killed. On the other track was a smaller weevil.
    Obviously, I had to choose the lesser of two weevils.

  • @Pyranders
    @Pyranders 7 месяцев назад +3

    I think that the fat man variation might be skewed slightly because it wouldn’t realistically stop the trolly.

  • @Rory_79
    @Rory_79 5 месяцев назад +1

    I've been in this situation so many times it's almost absurd.
    Took me a while to get my technique down but what I do these days is pull the lever at just the right time so that the points derail the trolley and everyone survives.
    Zero deaths since 1994.

  • @myrddinwyllt3383
    @myrddinwyllt3383 Год назад +64

    I also kind of wonder about this same problem, taking it to extremes. Say you keep adding 1 person to the five. The first time you ask if they would let 5+1 die. Next you ask if they let 6+1 die. Eventually you get to "would they let all of humanity die" and not flip the lever. Since it's a thought experiment, you can even get to the point to where you would let an infinite amount of people die or flip the lever. I dunno. I'm not a philosophy major.

    • @averagejoe2232
      @averagejoe2232 Год назад +12

      That’s a good point! Morality is way too complicated lol. In most situations, I use a form of utilitarianism to make decisions, and I also think utilitarianism can justify human rights, but there’s a certain point when even the deontologist will violate those rights.

    • @jonathandavies1716
      @jonathandavies1716 Год назад +11

      lol Trolly Problem + Heap Problem. Wonder what others could be added.

    • @rodbenson219
      @rodbenson219 Год назад

      You definitely would do well in a philosophy class 😎. Well done.

    • @Unsensitive
      @Unsensitive Год назад

      Never did philosophy either.. but I'd think this points to how we weigh the "good" and "bad" factors in real life.
      We have our own emotions, knowledge of a situation, assumptions, how it will affect us personally vs others, etc
      One of the beauties of the trolley problem is it cleans up much of that mess, for clarity purposes.
      Bringing back in specific "messiness" to the process would allow for an even deeper understanding of one self and others.

    • @peterbabicki8252
      @peterbabicki8252 Год назад +3

      I think most people can't divorce the moral question from the pragmatic one. Most people don't want to go to prison for killing someone, so if in doubt they'd most likely just leave it alone - especially in the case where you're pushing someone onto railway tracks in an attempt to stop a train.
      I can just imagine explaining that to the authorities. _"Please explain why you pushed a man in front of that train to die with the other five people"_
      _"I thought a man might stop a train..."_

  • @silentisland7633
    @silentisland7633 Год назад +30

    Another problem with the experience machine is that it assumes the only factor is "realness" and seems to ignore the fact that we have connections to our world and they would be affected as well, potentially hurting or abandoning those around us in order to experience a better reality for ourselves.

  • @jerry_le_sax
    @jerry_le_sax 4 месяца назад

    That ad transition was perfection, I saw it coming but still watched the whole thing

  • @FreakHarryPotter
    @FreakHarryPotter Год назад

    "Pull the lever, Alex!"
    Alex: *pulls lever.
    People on the train track: "WRONG LEEEEEEEEVEEEEEEEEEER."

  • @anatolydyatlov963
    @anatolydyatlov963 Год назад +129

    One of the smoothest sponsor clips I've seen, well done, you really caught me off guard

  • @angrytigger83
    @angrytigger83 Год назад +96

    With the track loop problem, you didn't consider the trauma of the person deciding who is to die. That person could live for many years with the guilt of their decision.

    • @Aikano9
      @Aikano9 Год назад +15

      He saw 6 people die, what order they died in is irrelevant

    • @angrytigger83
      @angrytigger83 Год назад +7

      @@Aikano9 there is a difference between being a bystander and participating

    • @Star-Powder
      @Star-Powder Год назад +2

      @@angrytigger83 Well in this case letting 5 people die first would involve doing nothing, so it's still the best option.

    • @tanaelol
      @tanaelol Год назад +3

      @@Aikano9 not if you dont touch the lever and walk away

    • @BardedWyrm
      @BardedWyrm Год назад

      Or their guilt over their inability to decide. Or their guilt over merely surviving where others did not, despite their inability to save anyone.

  • @Fangria
    @Fangria 6 месяцев назад +1

    when you asked "who would you rather be friends with?" i said the guy on the top, because i now know how he treats his enemies

  • @CharinVZain
    @CharinVZain Год назад +1

    My favorite one was a trolley going through an un occupied track, but you can pull the lever to make it do a sick drift and run over the other 2 tracks with people in them.

  • @chancematters
    @chancematters Год назад +45

    On one hand, this is fascinating and I can rationally comprehend most of this.
    On the other hand, AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

  • @Paolo8772
    @Paolo8772 Год назад +41

    I love how the trolly problems became less likely, more ridiculous and ever more fascinating. That's my jam!

  • @boinkboinky2074
    @boinkboinky2074 6 месяцев назад

    "there is someone on the track, you can divert the trolley, killing no one, but then the trolley wouldn't do the sick loop-da-loop"

  • @dumbass3843
    @dumbass3843 7 месяцев назад +1

    The best one
    Is the
    "MULTI TRACK DRIFTING"
    *deja vu *

  • @ponteacampata
    @ponteacampata Год назад +44

    My all-time favourite would be the one where we have an infinte amount of people on either track, but the first track places each one at intervals of integer numbers whilst the seccond one places them each time twice as close. Anyway there will be an infinite number of victima, you can only choose how frecuently they would be diying

    • @AUTUMN-DARK
      @AUTUMN-DARK Год назад +1

      K that's pretty good

    • @ToppledTurtle834
      @ToppledTurtle834 Год назад +16

      easy, less frequent. The vast majority of these infinite people will be able to live out their days undisturbed by the train still travelling towards them. It's actually kind of like life, everybody has to die sometime. If we can double every bodies life that would be insane progress

    • @lawendabonawenturazimorode6850
      @lawendabonawenturazimorode6850 Год назад +13

      @@ToppledTurtle834 What's the point of living if you're tied down to the train tracks?

    • @aspiring.creative.person6092
      @aspiring.creative.person6092 Год назад +3

      Ok but if they live longer they just have trauma for longer

    • @derekeastman7771
      @derekeastman7771 Год назад

      What fucked up mathematician came up with that one? Either way, the trolly will stop at some point, they aren’t designed for running people over, after all.

  • @iant2946
    @iant2946 Год назад +46

    When you mentioned the Experience Machine, I had a thought as to why people would prefer not to be in it generally. It's about being able to control your own experience, rather than it being "real" or not. If you know you're going into a machine, you instinctively have a slight distrust in an object (the machine) never failing or of it taking your self-control away, and you'll quickly start to think of rationalisations for that feeling. I think if you can't intuitively sense (or assume) the consequences, there's doubt about safety.
    Similarly, with the big man on the bridge. Even if you know you can push him off and the trolley stops, you still vaguely foresee more consequences within and after that than pulling the lever, and you instinctively want to avoid them. It's only by abstracting the question so there are no perceived later consequences that the more rational option resolves easily, and you can only do that by intentionally thinking of it that way, taking longer.
    (I just wanted to write this down while I thought of it.)

    • @WolforNuva
      @WolforNuva Год назад +4

      Which is interesting, because I never thought about the possibility that this experience machine could fail, and until you mentioned it I thought to myself that I would happily go into the machine. But if we take into account that this machine has the possibility of breaking down, then yeah there's no way I'd choose it because it would suck to have a decade inside the machine of bliss, and then get booted back into reality where I'm now probably even worse off than before from not doing anything or maintaining relationships for a decade.

    • @nocare
      @nocare Год назад +3

      This is accurate and taking into account wider consequences of the actions is often the only way to solve the problem.
      However there is an insidious trap in doing that. Mistaking possibility for probability.
      Just because machines can fail does not mean this particular machine has even a slight chance of failure. Unless you have data to actually calculate a probability of occurrence then the possibility should not be a major deciding factor unless the possibility has a result of an existential threat variety.
      Of course the first action should be to gather more information to be able to calculate a probability but we are talking if for some reason you must make a choice with insufficient time or resources to do that.
      On top of this the illusion of control often warps what we thing the probability is rather than us focusing on the probability as it was calculated. Think for instance about the chance of a car accident. It's quite high yet we all get in cars on a daily basis. There is an illusion that we are in control of the car therefore we aren't at risk but in reality you have no control over other drivers, mechanical failures, freak accidents.
      Instead the logical thing to do would be to weigh the risk vs the reward and make a decision based on calculated net gain. So if the machine's chance of failure is identical to the chance of getting in a car crash it shouldn't matter to anyone who gets in a car daily that it could fail. However it will matter still to most people because it lacks that illusion of control.
      When you take this though pattern to an extreme you end up refusing to ever risk suffering for a chance at a better life which on a societal level means society never tries to fix its problems.

    • @sulas548
      @sulas548 Год назад

      Given the high percentage of people that take recreationally drugs to alter their consciousness I would guess that quite a lot of people would go into the machine.

    • @ZinebFakir
      @ZinebFakir Год назад +2

      I don't believe you have more control over your circumstances and emotions in "real" life than in a simulated world anyway.

    • @frankfahrenheit9537
      @frankfahrenheit9537 Год назад

      Experience machine == Startrek Holodeck.
      People seem to enjoy said holodeck a lot
      I would program a sex orgy with 5 Playboy pets
      and never leave the machine again.

  • @Illegally-Blind
    @Illegally-Blind 4 месяца назад +1

    My dude you had me captivated every second.
    Excellent work

  • @AM70764
    @AM70764 Год назад +5

    I feel like a problem that arise from the fat man dilemma is that it just doesn’t seem like a good solution in practice. There would be high chances that both the fat man and the 5 people would be killed, and even justify (in court for example) that killing the man really saved the group doesn’t seem easy.
    Of course we assume for the dilemma that it would save those people, but when we try to imagine the situation in our heads I think it really isn’t as obvious as the lever case

    • @Granad784
      @Granad784 4 месяца назад

      You don't understand what a moral problem is

    • @AM70764
      @AM70764 4 месяца назад

      @@Granad784 Stop me if I'm wrong, but I think the purpose is to test our moral intuitions. I claim that there is very high chances that they could be biased by the irrealistic setup of the dilemma, and this just seems to be a good explanation to why people would not save 5 people in that situation

    • @Granad784
      @Granad784 4 месяца назад

      @@AM70764 Intuiton moral means you go with the intuiton,the intuiton is the fat man stops it because that is how the situation is presented you can also assume only the people in the tracks,you and the man would know.

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic  Год назад +1613

    Let me know if you enjoyed this, as it can easily become a series!

    • @spridle
      @spridle Год назад +53

      Definitely make this a series, please.

    • @senkuishigami2485
      @senkuishigami2485 Год назад +16

      YESSSSS
      We need more philosophical videos like this. Please make a series on philosophical videos with references to philosophical literature like Rationality Rule's Kalam Series with Majesty of reason.

    • @TechyBen
      @TechyBen Год назад +1

      I hate to say it (and I'm happy for critique of it) but this is an argument of God's inaction right here. XD
      God's just left with a train lever, and using his infinite compute ability to try and solve it... sadly, it takes longer than infinite time. :P

    • @MassMultiplayer
      @MassMultiplayer Год назад +1

      ye milk us, we are concentend, my brain dopamine +1 "series?" content! philosophy?
      i think it work well we get hooked, 1m sub lets go !
      random thought ; maybe try doing less high pitch at every last word of sentence, it feel a bit like karen angry inverted GNgngngnn GNnggngn it goes gngngnnGN gngngnGN lolol sorry i thought it was funny

    • @beta-08
      @beta-08 Год назад +2

      yes, please!!!

  • @bellowingsilence
    @bellowingsilence Год назад +58

    Thank you. Problem 5 finally found that point where I felt that just not getting involved and letting fate play out was really the only option there.

    • @sertu1462
      @sertu1462 Год назад +5

      @@mon4d
      I'd argue that inaction can be just as wrong as action. If you were to witness someone who is heavily injured on the sidewalk, begging for help while you do nothing and just watch them bleed to death, then you are at least partially responsible if this person dies. In the trolley dilemma, it would be a more complicated situation with more angles, but you'd still refuse to help people in need. It would still be an action that you could be held accounteable for. Whoever you chose to die, you are responsible for it. The moment you realise that you can save any of them, you're gonna be responsible for someone's death.
      About not understanding the situation exactly; In real life, this would propably be true, since the controls for railway tracks and the means to supervise them are propably not that intuitive. But in the though experiment, we do know the outcomes and we know how to control which one takes place. We understand the whole experiment clearly, so we understand the situation clearly.

  • @DoctorHero
    @DoctorHero 6 месяцев назад

    “The track is heading towards B.
    If you pull the lever, it will switch to A, but it won’t do the totally sick loop-da-loop.”