crouching_sin: (you'll be pleadin' while you're bleedin')
Naoya ([personal profile] crouching_sin) wrote2015-03-10 03:11 pm

[Anon] [Text]

Here's a question for you all. It's something that I read a while back, and I'm interested in your answers. Anonymous is fine, if you want.

There are five patients in a hospital. All of them are dying due to complications with various organs. All of them will die within the next day or so if they don't get an organ transplant. Magic won't save any of them, incidentally, if you were hoping to use that.

A young backpacker comes into the hospital or a checkup. He has no relatives, and he is in excellent health. As it happens, you, the surgeon on duty, notice that he is a perfect match for all five of the patients.

Assuming the backpacker does not give consent, is it morally permissible to cut him up and transfer the organs to the other patients? These are not organs that the backpacker can live without, so he'll die if you do.

I'm interested to hear what you think.
explosivecombat: (How cruel...)

[personal profile] explosivecombat 2015-03-11 08:37 pm (UTC)(link)
And yet by your own admission, posing this problem has nothing to do with debating utilitarianism and everything to do with trying to seem edgy and getting a rise out of people.