The Trolley Problem, by Judith Jarvis Thomson

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The Bystander at the Switch case is a fundamental part of Thomson’s argument in “Trolley Problem.” The basis of her paper is to explain the moral difference between this case, which she deems morally permissible (1398), and the Transplant case, which she deems morally impermissible (1396). In the Bystander at the Switch case, a bystander sees a trolley hurtling towards five workers on the track and has the option of throwing a switch to divert the trolley’s path towards only one worker. Thomson finds the Bystander at the Switch case permissible under two conditions: 1) first, that the same threat is diverted from a larger to a smaller group of people, and 2) second, that the means by which this threat is diverted does not in itself constitute an infringement of anyone’s rights (1407). However, in order for her thesis to be correct, the Bystander at the Switch case must always be morally permissible. There should be no situation in which it is morally impermissible to kill the one and save the five. If there were such a situation, where both parts of Thomson’s thesis remained true but it would still be morally impermissible to kill the one because of some outside factor, then Thomson’s thesis would no longer be the complete answer. Let’s consider the Mother-Son case. The trolley is still hurtling towards five workers. Here, the bystander is a woman who has the option of throwing a switch to divert the path of the trolley towards only one person. In this case, however, that one person happens to be her son. Is it still morally permissible for her to throw the switch? I would have to say no. However, in this case, the decision of flipping the switch to divert the path of the trolley still satisfies both of Thomson’s condi... ... middle of paper ... ... may be able to understand why the mayor would break his promise and flip the switch, but it would never accept why the mother would flip the switch and kill her own son. The mother-son case illustrates that there are more factors in play than just the two that Thomson presents in her thesis. Thomson’s conditions by themselves cannot explain every situation. The relationship between the people involved can also affect whether a decision is morally permissible or not. If that relationship entails that one person is emotionally bound and ethically responsible for the security and well-being of the other, the first cannot knowingly contribute to the death of the second. Thomson’s thesis must be modified to include this condition as well. Works Cited Thomson, Judith J. "The Trolley Problem." The Yale Law Journal 94.6 (1985): 1395-415. JSTOR. Web. 20 Jan. 2009.

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