You are presented with a number of situations, and in each you must decide what to do. You can assume that nobody will know what you do or try to stop you. Unless otherwise specified, you have no chance of failure. Unless otherwise specified, all aspects of their lives (age, profession, etc) are equal.
i-Two people enter a hospital; one healthy, one sick. You may let the sick one die, or harvest the organs of the healthy one to save the sick one.
ii-Three people enter a hospital; one healthy, two sick. You may let the sick ones die, or harvest the organs of the healthy one to save them both. Is there a minimum ratio of sick people to healthy ratio for you to kill all the healthy ones to save the sick one?
iii-You can harvest the organs of an older individual with low life expectancy to save a person with high life expectancy if saved.
iv-You can harvest the organs of one person with life expectancy thirty years to save four older people with life expectancy ten years if saved.
v-You can harvest the organs of two older people with life expectancy ten years to save a person with life expectancy thirty years if saved. Is there a minimum ratio of life expectancy saved to life expectancy sacrificed?
vi-You can sacrifice two smokers of life expectancy fifteen years to save three older people of life expectancy ten years.
vii-You can sacrifice three older people of life expectancy ten years to save two smokers of life expectancy fifteen years.
viii-You can sacrifice a drifter with no family or friends to save a person with lots of close friends.
ix-You can sacrifice someone with no family of friends to save a person with lots of dependants.
x-You can sacrifice one person to save two people, each with probability 1/2.
xi-You can sacrifice one person to save ten people, each with probability 1/10. If no, what is the minimum number that would have be saved to choose yes?
xii-A loner with no family or friends wants to kill themselves. You can stop it, or let it happen.
xiii-A loner with no family or friends wants to be killed by another. You can stop it, or let it happen.
xiv-An individual with lots of family and friends wants to kill themselves. You can stop it, or let it happen.
xv-An individual with lots of dependants wants to kill themselves. You can stop it, or let it happen.
xvi-You may sacrifice an individual who has committed minor crimes to save an individual with a clean record.
xvii-You may sacrifice a mass murderer to save an individual with a clean record.
xviii-Two people are being denied freedom of speech. You may kill one to liberate the other.
xix-Two people are being denied freedom of belief. You may kill one to liberate the other.
xx-You may kill one person with life expectancy ten years to increase another's life expectancy by fifteen years. Is there a minimum ratio of gained life expectancy to lost life expectancy for you to do this?
xxi-You may kill one person to provide entertainment for ten others.
xxii-You may kill one person to provide entertainment for a billion others. Is there a number of people such that you would kill one person to entertain that many?
xxiii-One person is playing a game, and a second does not have a game, but would enjoy the game more if they had it. Do you take the game from the first and give it to the second?
xxiv-You are playing and enjoying a game, and another person who will enjoy it more wants to play it. Are you obliged to give it to them?
xxv-Does the answer to the previous question change if you particularly like or dislike the other person?
xxvi-Your house has such thin walls that neither you nor your neighbour can play music without the other being forced to listed in it. If your neighbour is not doing anything that requires silence, do you play your music?
xxvii-If you said yes to the previous one, what about if you know your neighbour does not share your taste in music? If you said no to the previous one, what about if you know your neighbour shares your taste in music?
xxviii-If someone is performing an action that you strongly object to but is legal, is it acceptable to try to disrupt that activity? If yes, are you obliged to?
xxix-If someone often performs actions that you strongly oppose to, is it acceptable to try to disrupt unrelated activities? If yes, are you obliged to?
xxx-If a quality is correlated with people of a certain group, and an individual is a member of that group, in the absence of further information is it acceptable to treat that individual differently based on that attribute (weighted by probability)?
xxxi-At what point in the process from sperm/egg to embryo to foetus to baby to adult does it become acceptable (if at any point) to kill/deny life? At what point (if any) does someone gain the right to permanently alter their body (including harm)?
xxxii-Does an individual have the right to say things that another may consider inappropriate? If so, do they have the right to an audience? Does an individual have the right to ignore the speech of another? What if the speech includes things that are demonstrably false?
xxxiii-Does an individual have the right to keep a secret from another? What if the act of keeping the secret may cause harm?
xxxiv-Does an individual have the right to own a pet? If yes, does an individual have the right to own a slave? If no, does an individual have the right to own a non-human creature of significant mental capacity?
xxxv-Does an individual have the obligation to raise their children? Does an individual have the right to raise their children as they wish? Do they have the right to have children? What if they are not able to properly provide for children?
xxxvi-Does an individual (not government) have the right to claim another's property if it is unused and will foreseeably remain unused? What if it is being used, but less efficiently that it could be?
xxxvii-Does an individual selling a good or service have the right to charge what they want? Does this change in the presence/absence of competition? Does this change if the good/service is/isn't essential?
xxxviii-Does an individual have the right to believe what they want? What if this includes beliefs that can be proven to be logically inconsistent? What if this results in actions that impede or prevent the individual's goals?
xxxix-Does an individual have the right to associate with whatever groups they wish to? What if already existing members of a group do not wish to associate with them? What if the group in question provides a danger to the individual or another individual?
xxxx-Do individuals have the right to demand that others accommodate their deviations (deviations meant in a technical and nonoffensive manner)? Does this change if the deviation is physical or mental? Does this change if the deviation is voluntary or involuntary?
1. Is the healthy person willing to sacrifice themselves to save this person? If yes, then go for it.
2. Same as above. Is the healthy person willing to make the sacrifice? If yes, then yes. The only ratio is the amount of willing candidates to help the sick. If no one is willing to sacrifice themself, then no healthy people will have their organs harvested.
3. Again, only if the older person is willing.
4. Same as above.
5. See above. No one should be sacrificed to save others against their will outside of truly extreme circumstances.
6. Not against their will.
7. ^
8. ^
9. ^
10. ^
11. ^
12. That's what therapy is for. If you have the chance to stop a suicide, then do anything in your power to do so within reason and the boundaries of the law. However, I do not approve of people languishing in mental institutions for decades simply because they want to kill themselves. If they are so hell-bent on doing so, then let them.
13. Murder is never warranted outside of circumstances involving those
proven to have committed equal or worse crimes. However, a legal trial is always preferable. If there is no proof that the first person has committed such a crime, then it is every citizen's duty to prevent such a killing. However, if for example someone's son has been killed and the murderer is caught red-handed by the father, then I would not intervene in the father carrying out vigilante justice.
14. See 13.
15. See 12.
16. Not without their willingness and consent.
17. If the person is proven without a doubt to be a mass murderer, then (a.) I believe the punishment should be death anyway. If he saves an innocent life by dying then so be it.
18. No. Less drastic action should be taken.
19. See 18.
20. No and no.
21. Absolutely not.
22. I am not against public execution of criminals proven beyond a shadow of a doubt to have committed a capital offense. In any other circumstance, no.
23. If the game belongs to the first person, doing so would violate their inalienable right to property. If it the second person's property, then yes. If the game belongs to neither party, then a compromise should be made. If both parties are adults, then they can work it out themselves.
24. No, but it would be polite to compromise.
25. No.
26. Get headphones.
27. If you know this, then why not ask the neighbor if they have a problem with it? If you don't want to, then see 26.
28. It is acceptable within the boundaries of societal norms and the law. For example, protesting the WDC or Scientology is within one's inalienable right of free speech and falls within societal norms, as does protesting the government. One has no obligation to do this whatsoever and it remains their personal choice.
29. One should not be prevented from doing so within the boundaries of the law, but it's just plain rude.
30. Legally, yes. Ethically, no.
31. Abortions during the first trimester of pregnancy for reasons such as financial inability to raise the child or severe health complications are acceptable. After that, I consider execution for proven capital offenses acceptable after one becomes an adult.
32. Yes, all of these things are within their inalienable right to free speech.
33. It is acceptable for secrets to be kept so long as the keeping of such a secret does not result in permanent injury or death of at least one human, or the reduction in quality of life of at least part of a society.
34. Yes, one has the right to own a pet. The owning of slaves is unethical, as is the owning of demonstrably intelligent animals such as dolphins and elephants.
35. An individual is obligated to raise their children to the best of their ability, and if this is not sufficient as determined by a judge then the children or child in question shall be turned over to the state or an orphanage. An individual has the right to raise their child as they wish so long as no laws are broken and the child is able to function in society. Raising a child in such a way that they are unable to function in society is immoral. If they are unable to provide for their children, then the child or children shall be handed over to the state or an orphanage.
36. That depends on the circumstances. Things discarded by another individual can, of course, be taken by others. If a building or vehicle is clearly abandoned, then searching it or cannibalizing it for materials, profit, etc. is acceptable. If a property is in use by another party regardless of their manner of using it, then claiming it violates their inalienable right to own property.
37. They have the right to charge what they wish outside of extenuating circumstances such as a disaster situation where such products should be donated to those in need until the situation is under control.
38. An individual has the inalienable right to freedom of belief. No belief should be forced on an individual. However, actions taken resulting in harm to others will be treated as a crime regardless of motivation. This is generally directed at religious extremism.
39. An individual has the right to associate with any group they wish so long as said group does not perform violent or otherwise illegal actions. Group members are under no obligation to accept a prospective member into said group, and groups posing harm to others should be taken care of by law enforcement.
40. So long as voluntary deviations cause no harm to person or property, then discrimination against them is immoral. All deviations or handicaps such as physical or mental disabilities must be accommodated so long as such accommodations do not create an unreasonable strain on society as a whole.
My personal belief is that individual rights and freedoms must be upheld outside of extreme extenuating circumstances. No one shall die against their will unless they have been proven to commit a capital crime. Individuals have rights to property, free speech, the right to a fair trial, and the rest of the rights specified in the American Constitution.