The Trolley Problem Mysteries
F.M. Kamm and Edited by Eric Rakowski
Suppose you can stop a trolley from killing five
people, but only by turning it onto a side track where it will kill one. May
you turn the trolley? What if the only way to rescue the five is to topple a
bystander in front of the trolley so that his body stops it but he dies? May
you use a device to stop the trolley that will kill a bystander as a side
effect? The "trolley problem" challenges us to explain and justify
our different intuitive judgments about these and related cases. Frances Kamm's
2013 Tanner Lectures present some of her views on this notorious moral
conundrum. After providing a brief history of changing views of what the
problem is about and attempts to solve it, she focuses on two prominent issues:
Does who turns the trolley and how the harm is shifted affect the moral
permissibility of acting? The answers to these questions lead to general
proposals about when we may and may not harm some to help others. Three
distinguished philosophers - Judith Jarvis Thomson (one of the originators of
the trolley problem), Thomas Hurka, and Shelly Kagan - then comment on Kamm's
proposals. She responds to each comment at length, providing an exceptionally
rich elaboration and defense of her views. This book is invaluable not only to
philosophers concerned about the trolley problem, but to anyone worried about
how we ought to act when we can lessen harm to some by harming others and how
we can reach a decision about the question.