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🚃 The Trolley Problem

Would You Kill One to Save Five?

Philippa Foot (1967) & Judith Jarvis Thomson (1976)

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Do you pull the lever to divert the trolley?

The Switch Scenario

A runaway trolley is heading toward five people tied to the tracks. You stand next to a lever that can divert the trolley onto a side track—where only one person is tied. If you pull the lever, you save five but kill one. If you do nothing, five die.

How People Actually Respond

Scenario Would Kill the One Would Let Five Die
The Switch ~90%
~10%
The Footbridge ~10%
~90%
The Loop ~50%
~50%
"Why is it that most people say you should flip the switch in the first case, but not push the fat man in the second? The result is the same: one dead, five saved."
— The central puzzle of the Trolley Problem

What's Really Going On?

⚖️ Doctrine of Double Effect

It may be permissible to cause harm as a side effect of achieving a good, but not to cause harm as a means to a good. In the Switch, death is a side effect; in the Footbridge, it's the means.

👐 Doing vs. Allowing

Is there a moral difference between actively causing harm and merely allowing it to happen? Pulling the lever feels like redirecting; pushing feels like killing.

📏 Physical Contact

fMRI studies show different brain regions activate. Pushing someone with your hands triggers emotional responses that pulling a lever doesn't.

🎯 Using as Means

In the Footbridge, you use the person's body as a trolley-stopper. In the Switch, the person isn't "used"—they're just unfortunately on the track.

🧮 Utilitarian View

From a pure numbers perspective, the answer is always the same: five lives > one life. The method shouldn't matter if the outcome is identical.

🚗 Real-World Stakes

Self-driving cars face trolley problems constantly. How should they be programmed? These thought experiments have real engineering implications.