From a practical perspective, one might also consider prioritizing the first distress call, especially if you were already in the process of responding to it
@joshuafernandes66843 жыл бұрын
Yeah, i was thinking it all along
@stellar7833 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of how ambulances operate, if they encounter an emergency on the way to another, initial emergency, they don’t change their objective but continue on their way.
@GraveUypo3 жыл бұрын
its what i would do
@Quantum_Beyblados3 жыл бұрын
That's what a computer would do, without an AI
@ZennExile3 жыл бұрын
You all clearly did not get the point...
@hanzohashashi32593 жыл бұрын
As someone who used to be a lifeguard, I was told to always prioritize the one who is closer from where I'm standing. Every life is precious
@5kom53 жыл бұрын
I thought exactly that, I would base my decision on whatever route is safer for my own crew.
@jorgeestrada85413 жыл бұрын
Not every life is
@BuetifullPersun3 жыл бұрын
@@jorgeestrada8541 many lives aren’t and are the opposite of precious too lol
@borgir63683 жыл бұрын
@@BuetifullPersun like of weebs
@pessimistkai55693 жыл бұрын
@@BuetifullPersun you are no one to judge. Don't play God.
@Kami-mk7tu2 жыл бұрын
"Alright, I've decided, let's set course for." "They are all dead sir, you took too long to decide."
@cristian-bull2 жыл бұрын
...and they all died in a horrible way.
@jjba35712 жыл бұрын
@@cristian-bull o.o
@vive3352 жыл бұрын
@@cristian-bull bruh that’s harsh
@thriquinox2 жыл бұрын
Students died cold and their insides splattered, intestines dangling and entangling the now floating remains. The miners died with their flesh melting off their bones, all while suffocating in the thick, dark smoke.
@AMcGrath822 жыл бұрын
@@thriquinox Dude.
@moharikram1687 Жыл бұрын
Definitely first distress call. - You're already heading there. Changing course might be the worst option which is both of them perish. - Telic 12 have bigger problems because humans CANNOT breathe in space. The explosion causing the ships to lose oxygen whilst Pareto losing thruster, all ships have alternative control system. As long as the captain of the ships alive, you can juggle alongside the belt around the gaps. Their chances to survive is more apparent than the other one who losing oxygen at the extreme rate.
@thebrowser6758 Жыл бұрын
that is indeed the one that makes the most sense
@gliese667ce8 Жыл бұрын
@@thebrowser6758 But in this scenario the workers are in a horrible situation and the students are in a better situation. That leaves us time to spare to save the poor people and then the rich people. What if the students and the workers were stuck in the same spacecraft together? or maybe, what if 5 common people and 5 family members of rich, powerful and corrupt businessmen where stuck on the 40 th floor of a skyscraper in the exact same room next to each other ? If the firefighters saved the common people and thr rich accidentally die, what if the corrupt and powerful businessmen wreak havoc on the lives of the firefighters using multiple corrupt loopholes and tricks up their sleeves?
@gliese667ce8 Жыл бұрын
@@thebrowser6758 In the worker-student scenario, the survival rate is different so we can say that we will most likely be able to save both parties. But what about the poor-rich people situation where the chances of survival of both the parties are completely equal and hence we can say that we have to make a choice because we will most likely be only able to save one party?
@kotadreemurr8499 Жыл бұрын
also asteroid belts are almost completely empty space. which would make it far, far less dangerous than the people running out of oxygen.
@gliese667ce8 Жыл бұрын
@@kotadreemurr8499 you missed the point. i was saying that what if their chances of survival were equal because of being in the same situation.
@joshdudeguy28303 жыл бұрын
As a nurse, we were taught to prioritize by what would kill the patient sooner. Whichever one I must save first I should save first. However, in a disaster event when we are forced to take in large quantities of patients, we also take into account which ones would not be able to be saved or which ones would take up too many resources by themselves to save (for a low possibility of success). In the Pearl Harbor attacks this was done and that part even made it to the movie (Pearl Harbor). We have to be quick on our feet and detach ourselves from the situation emotionally..
@niconilo973 жыл бұрын
yup do what you must and think about it later
@ithihaskaar3 жыл бұрын
Wow you treated pearl harbour patients?
@stansman54613 жыл бұрын
@@ithihaskaar I think he meant doctors and nurses at that time also had to make this decision since too many people were coming injured.
@Lernos13 жыл бұрын
@@yoketah Just don't become a doctor, a president, a military officer, an adrenaline junkie or a spaceship captain, and you should be good.
@eklectiktoni3 жыл бұрын
Thats exactly what I was thinking
@vasilkalov26223 жыл бұрын
When I went on life guard corse we were tought who to Save if 3 people are drowning - the one who is closest, then the next, then the next. This way you have the highest chance of saving at least one person. If you swim to a further one, they may drown while you go there and the time lost may cause the closest one to also drown.
@Sadaaaaf3 жыл бұрын
Obviously lmao imagine someone’s drowning beside you and you swim pass them and go “ya sorry bud just wait I gotta get this other dude first”
@Ghost-tv1yg3 жыл бұрын
@@Sadaaaaf he mean to save the one with the higher chance first
@Sadaaaaf3 жыл бұрын
@@Ghost-tv1yg nonetheless
@Operation3Sixty3 жыл бұрын
Same idea for triage patients during a mass casualty situation. Help the ones who have the best chance of surviving first
@_graiderz24623 жыл бұрын
What if there is 2 people drowning, a distance apart from each other. The distance between you and the 2 people, are the same. Which will you save first?
@Xcallion2 жыл бұрын
You could also take the extremely selfish route of prioritization. Failing to rescue the college students when you could have will generate much more backlash upon you personally than failing to rescue the workers. The college students being members of affluent families are much more likely to leave behind grieving parents who may try to take vengeance on you in the form of lawsuits or even assault. On that same note, rescuing the college students is far more likely to result in some kind of personal benefit for you for the exact same reason. The grateful and affluent parents have the means and the motive to reward you. Obviously from a moral standpoint, this isn't the correct way to go about making the decision, but it is another pattern of thought to consider. Such things may influence the final decision for many people in that scenario.
@Mukkuk2 жыл бұрын
Or, which also feels extremely immoral, is to consider the sum value of life indebtedness when saving either ship. It is personally more valuable to have someone influential or powerful indebted to you, than someone who "only" has gratitude to offer. If you are able to leverage that influence into social change that elevates all lesser privileged to a better social and financial standing, it might be worth it sacrificing a fraction of that group.
@shanggosteen98042 жыл бұрын
How is it our fault that they're in a asteroid belt and are having their lives at risks, whether we save them or not their parents are absolutely non likely to sue us because first we are not the ones who launched that ship second the workers have families and wives at home and just having parents worry about you is a lot less grieving than a whole family ( I am not counting friends although)
@susulpone2 жыл бұрын
"Obviously from a moral standpoint, this isn't the correct way to go about making the decision" this is debateable. From your moral standpoint, it might not be, but there is moral frameworks that consider egoism (thats the term for "selfish route of prioritization") to be correct
@mystery82072 жыл бұрын
@@shanggosteen9804 Either way they’ll die without my help, and I may be potentially risking myself. Why shouldn’t I pick the one that’ll benefit me the most?
@wren_.2 жыл бұрын
@@shanggosteen9804 karen’s with money
@lupetedigio3 жыл бұрын
The real problem comes after you've flipped the coin and you forget who was heads and who was tails
@sumitrana24203 жыл бұрын
Facts
@Bodek-7563 жыл бұрын
You don't have to worry about it if it lands on the side. That way the universe is clearly giving you a sign to sit back and wait.
@sachinfulsunge99773 жыл бұрын
A coin flip is not random technically
@PurpleObscuration3 жыл бұрын
@@sachinfulsunge9977, It depends on the coin
@sachinfulsunge99773 жыл бұрын
@@PurpleObscuration Again, Apart from Theoretical pov no coin is perfect.
@dion96993 жыл бұрын
Considering the fact that the middle aged men would likely have families depending on them (as is usual of those who are less well off), I think saving them would be the best option. If they die their children and wives might die or suffer heavily, as a result of losing their breadwinner. In contrast most college students don't have any dependants.
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
I'd save the students due to them having more potential.
@Quantum_Beyblados3 жыл бұрын
@Sanguine Maybe you could make a deal : I'll save you if you look after the worker's kids. They'd have promised on their lives so you save them, the poor's childs and wifes only suffer from not having the men. No problems about economics then.
@jeffismywaifu40933 жыл бұрын
@@Quantum_Beyblados you could also flip it around and say you're threatening these people with sure death unless they take this huge ammount of responsibility which will cripple them financially. At the latest once the police hears about it it falls apart.
@JT-xn9ei3 жыл бұрын
Ended watching the video settling on a similar line of thought, it isn't just on those two ships that is affected, it's also their families and other loved ones. Although as usual, the answer will always still be _it depends._ I still lack context of other factors, like life insurance and the chance of survival of each ship with and without intervention or delay of help. There could also definitely might be a way to save both. In the vacuum of space the vacationers could possibly alter their course.
@ya60683 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same! College student only leave their parents behind but they would definitely survive. Not sure about the families of the first ship
@lkjkhfggd3 жыл бұрын
I think in this situation (and any situation where you need to decide quickly) you save the people from the first distress call because it came first. An ambulance wouldn't stop en route and start going somewhere else just because a wealthier person also made a 911 call. If you have to decide who gets the donated heart or something, that's tougher, but still I think it should go to whoever has been waiting for it for the longest (first in line).
@dzleandrew45443 жыл бұрын
Your second idea cant do, Lets say an old man has been the longest but then a younger one came in.. Who will you save? The old man who pretty much have done everything in life or the younger one who has more to come
@cng-3 жыл бұрын
Even if (in the case of the donated organ) that person is middle age/older? In their remaining lifetime, they have a lesser chance of being happier afterwards, or making other people happier than someone younger will. As such, I think the youngest should take priority. After all, a family losing a parental figure will worsen, but it's members will still have a greater total remaining lifetime to be happy and make others happy than a family losing someone younger. The sadness of those mourning an older one will eventually be offset by the happiness the young one creates. Adding in other variables creates too much chaos for the judgement to be reliable in my opinion. In cases with groups of more than one person, I don't think any method is precise enough to determine which group is the better pick on average.
@charlesleninja3 жыл бұрын
But dispatch regularly branch off en route ambulances if the call is more urgent.
@gummy58623 жыл бұрын
@@dzleandrew4544 Agreed
@gummy58623 жыл бұрын
No it shouldn’t be first come first serve because realistically in an organ donation context, you want to give it to someone who will utilize it best. I’d definitely rather give it to an otherwise healthy 20 year old than a 65 year old with a whole array of other health problems.
@Hana1LuLu Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, my natural line of thinking led me to choose the workers because there are likely families counting on them. So more tragedy and loss would occur if they died, because more people would be affected more severely.
@JasonLatouche Жыл бұрын
But the big business relies on tourism... if the press talks bad about this incident, people won't travel anymore. If there is no tourism, a lot of folks can lose their jobs too. I mean, I understand they won't die, but if you think about it, this is how many corporations make decisions out there...
@matusguga3997 Жыл бұрын
@@JasonLatouchebut the tourism business probably exploits some people and is bad for the environment too...
@MarshyMellow1223 Жыл бұрын
Don’t the college students have families too? I kinda agree with the coin flip option.
@wingrostov9382 Жыл бұрын
Save the workers first. The ship is already heading that direction and probably close to it. Now the college kids? They are literally on luxury vessel and number 20 people. Most ships have rescue vessels so I fail to see how the college kids are in distress. Workers on other hand...have a fire on their ship and running out of air. What's to say the only entrance to rescue ships is blocked by the explosion and literal hole in space from said explosion? In conclusion: -Workers number 30 people on said vessel. More lives saved is better than less. -Middle aged workers have families and work to provide for their families. Middle age workers provide more to needs of society since they build everything from ground up. You (the captain) were already heading to first distress call. Chance of saving 30 people is higher since less distance to traverse. -College kids of 20 are on a luxury ship. No ship either sea or space would not have rescue boats (rescue-ships). It's international maritime law to have enough lifeboats for all passengers and crew on board. Likely this being in future this law is required for space vessels as well. -Average distance between asteroids to other asteroids in asteroid-belts is 600,000 miles (966,000 km) away from one another. -The tourist ship only problem is thruster. Either than that ship is fine and they have plenty of time to get to life ships if they still feel in danger. -(Bonus) You the captain on your ship probably has his own backup ship (rescue-ships) incase you need to escape the vessel. You can have some crew members use it to rescue the college kids while you and majority of the crew rescue the workers. In these discussions where we have choice A or B (this or that) there's always more options instead of ones on the table.
@Hana1LuLu Жыл бұрын
@@MarshyMellow1223 Yes, but students aren't the breadwinners of their families.
@zi-le62803 жыл бұрын
I would answer the first distress call based on practicality, since the workers are facing a more imminent problem: the lack of oxygen, which would result in the ultimate and undeniable death of all 30 people. The students on the other hand, are headed towards an asteroid belt, which although they have a broken thruster, there is a slim chance that they will not hit any asteroids ( or be hit by just a few, not enough to damage the ship completely.) Their ship is also a luxury ship, which I assume will have some form of safety measures that might protect its passengers. Although the chances of that are slim, if both ships are left without help, the students have a higher chance of survival.
@thedrew30163 жыл бұрын
The video is addressing the morality of killing 20 rich students or 30 poor workers, not whether or not a ship can survive an asteroid belt 🤦♂ Its clearly assumed that if you help one group, the other group will not survive.
@farhanshiraz36373 жыл бұрын
Yes but he’s showing the (very slight) flaw in the dilemma.
@zi-le62803 жыл бұрын
@@thedrew3016 I understand what you're trying to say, but in my opinion, the video merely posed a question, and looked at it from a moral perspective, and I answered it from a logical one. The video did not state that you had to answer it from the moral aspect, so there is no right or wrong answer. 😂
@IHearColors3 жыл бұрын
Why make it a moral dilemma about who to save? The answer is simple, first save the workers because their danger is imminent, then you can save the students. Asteroid belts aren't nearly as dense and dangerous as you might think. The chances of being hit by asteroids in a asteroids belt are almost equal with the chance to win the lottery.
@zuhairmehdee3 жыл бұрын
Actually given how far apart asteroids actually are the chance they would get hit by an asteroid at all is very small.
@fegoracedia60803 жыл бұрын
The coin flip really hits hard with the truth of reality. If among the workers you realize that your struggle to survive now depends on a game of luck and with the position they are in, they wouldve lost all hope as surely luck was never on their side most of their life. If among the students you realize that your name, money and position are meaningless in the face of imminent death
@lillymirembe44743 жыл бұрын
This is tragic, brilliant and beautiful
@naprox3n_offline3 жыл бұрын
@@lillymirembe4474 +1
@NoneNullAnd03 жыл бұрын
I think some factors can be used to make a better or worse decision, but it doesn't really matter much. As long as if you're trying to save someone, you've made the right decision.
@tedchirvasiu3 жыл бұрын
Yes, but you can apply this method only to a certain extent. What if on one ship you have 30 workers and on the other you have all the students on Earth (possibly a few hundred millions). It wouldn't feel as easy to just flip a coin.
@fegoracedia60803 жыл бұрын
@@tedchirvasiu if you think about that ratio and even to be generous to bring it down to 1 million students, thats not a ship anymore but an entire space station so area of damages would be far spread out. The students would instead take it to themselves to cut their own loses by saving the ones in their own group then detaching those that cant be saved basically by ejecting the damaged sites so it doesnt bring down the whole station. almost similar to a lizard to escape it will cut off its tail
@LobbeWOW3 жыл бұрын
The moment you start attributing value to each distress call, you already lost. Time is a factor in emergencies, so the right choice is to pick one (doesn't matter which) and leave the second guessing till afterwards.
@MissMoontree3 жыл бұрын
This is why we need psychopaths. But truly, in this situation you realistically would already be trying to save whoever came first.
@FullyAlive333 жыл бұрын
True either way people will live and die what's important is just that not EVERYONE dies and a decision is made quickly. that's why going with a coin toss does seem to be a good method.
@valentinmitterbauer41963 жыл бұрын
@@MissMoontree You don't need a psychopath to perform cold, rational decisions. Even neurotypical people can fall in a state of shock, that either completely hinders them to make decisions or, contrary, makes them perform in a kind of "autmated" way. For example, most hit-and-run drivers in my country hand themselfes over to the police, but only after they have gotten home. In the time between the accident and their arrival at home their behaviour of fleeing from an accident they caused and pushing away any thoughts that revolve around the possible victims could be considered psychopathic. Also a psychopath would maybe settle for the option that generates the most personal profit, in this case the young, rich students. What would one get from saving the workers besides a pat on the shoulder and lawsuits from the dead students' families?
@eltonmateusnevesneves3 жыл бұрын
As said in the video, this not just for urgencies, but also emergencies that you have a little time to think, like which should get vaccines first
@ardi.wibowo3 жыл бұрын
I guess that's what that coin flip actually means? It doesn't matter which.
@pjengland012 жыл бұрын
Save the passengers on the Teleck 12. You are almost there and they are running out of air. The Pareeto is still structurally sound and might be able to recover on its own; also, if you bounce to every new distress call, you will never save anyone.
@TheSensationalMr.Science Жыл бұрын
I have a counter-offer: Utilitarian: who is worth more Egalitarian: flip a coin Engineer: whats the proper utilization of force to stop the students from careening into an asteroid belt without killing them? cause I'm an engineer and I am engi-here to fix problems! [obviously also saving the workers] Hope you have a great day & Safe Travels!
@honestlyeddie Жыл бұрын
In this scenario, both sides will die without help. There isn’t any optimistic chance that one may survive if you help the other.
@jon_espi106 ай бұрын
And asteroid belts arent very dense with asteroids, so there isnt as high of a chance they will die
@Gabe-vw2ux6 ай бұрын
And it’s 30 people vs. 20 and the 30 will help other people more.
@kingzakkuu78443 жыл бұрын
For so many reasons, I'd save the workers. 1) they asked for help first. 2) the route to help them seems a lot safer. 3) those workers have children and families. 4) there is a bigger number of them.
@Junior-nh7sr3 жыл бұрын
Plus they look like they were just having fun the other dudes had no choice but to go to work
@myrddinwyllt33833 жыл бұрын
What if the students were the ones who would make spaceships in the future and hypothetically go on to save millions. They could also grow up to be doctors, which would save lives. They could develop medicines and vaccines. One could go on to be a great philosopher that ends up realizing why the inequality is bad and ends up convincing society to fix it.
@Junior-nh7sr3 жыл бұрын
@@myrddinwyllt3383 not sure if they could do that but that is a good logic. I would probably still chose the first group since they ask first for the help. But you do bring a good argument. Both have good reasons to be help
@kingzakkuu78443 жыл бұрын
@@myrddinwyllt3383 the issue with that statement is that it is all hypothetical and not 100% a possibility. Sure there could be some bright students with a good future, but then again there is billions of people on earth and other beings in the universe. (I'm mentioning other beings cause in the video the captain of the ship was alien). The workers do have families, and it is true that the route to save them is much safer, and then again they asked first. So I'd still think its wiser to save them.
@squid_cake3 жыл бұрын
@@kingzakkuu7844 if those college students saving more people in the future is a hypothetical scenario, then who says you're to blame if they end up not helping other people in the future? That's not your fault, that's just the way the universe works.
@ricardodealmeida54853 жыл бұрын
I would also say that the severity of the problems plays a role too. If, for instance, rescuing the passengers from a specific ship requires significant intervention and would put the lives of my crew at risk, I would probably opt for the rescue mission that has the greatest chance of actually saving lives overall (including my own crew).
@bluey35753 жыл бұрын
Thats actually how doctors prioritize saving lives too.
@KCHTOfficial3 жыл бұрын
I think the severity of the porblem also plays a role because of the suffering of the people in trouble. If one group would have a slow and painful death and the other a quick and painless one, thenmaybe we should save the first.
@harrietjameson3 жыл бұрын
@@KCHTOfficial thats a great point, but a terrible reason to influence your decision, it may sound harsh but in most cases the severity of the problem is outweighed by a lot of other factors
@Daithi_mk3 жыл бұрын
Then it wouldn't be a moral dilemma would it?
@agnato68383 жыл бұрын
Obviously the hypothesis is that the rescuing cost is the same for both
@ffwast3 жыл бұрын
Most measures point to saving the workers, starting with the fact that they asked for help first so your obligation to answer distress calls is already spoken for.
@SleepyPanda-co3iy2 жыл бұрын
I'd make them all die because i was thinking for 4m25s
@vectorthehop39452 жыл бұрын
@@SleepyPanda-co3iy same tbh
@TheSensationalMr.Science Жыл бұрын
my thoughts on the matter: Utilitarian: who is worth more Egalitarian: flip a coin Engineer: whats the proper utilization of force to stop the students from careening into an asteroid belt without killing them? cause I'm an engineer and I am engi-here to fix problems! [you can guess my choice ;)] Hope you have a great day & Safe Travels!
@Dark_Slayer3000 Жыл бұрын
@@TheSensationalMr.Science Engineer gaming
@wren_. Жыл бұрын
saving the workers is honestly the best choice here. 1. you’ve already responded to their distress call 2. if you don’t respond, 100% of them will die, compared to a chance that the students don’t get hit by an asteroid and die. 3. asteroid belts are pretty empty because of how big space is, so they have a low chance of dying. 4. those miners are probably supporting families. the rich kids probably aren’t. 5. i hate rich collage kids (DO NOT START ANYTHING THAT WAS A JOKE)
@rameshjayaraman872 жыл бұрын
In this case, all other circumstances being equal, I would save the miners. They probably are the sole source of financial support to young family. So even if you consider lives saved/impacted, it's much more.
@willy4170 Жыл бұрын
But you have to consider that all miners most probably have life insurance in their contracts, so the families will be taken care of, and while the students ship is much closer to your ship
@pineappleudh6561 Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170 And the college student family's are wealthy, they ain't getting affected either.
@willy4170 Жыл бұрын
@@pineappleudh6561 they could be poor families that afforded the college through scholarships.
@pineappleudh6561 Жыл бұрын
@willy4170 The video actively calls them wealthy, they're going on vacation aswell.
@Hypogeal-Foundation Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170 Pretty sure the worker would make more money if he was alive.
@pandasteeze3 жыл бұрын
Based on every space movie/show I’ve ever seen, a distress signal from another ship is always a trap. I would ignore all and proceed with my life.
@molybdaen113 жыл бұрын
Can not risk losing that docking time by changing course, he?
@edgepixel84673 жыл бұрын
There’s at least a facehugger at the other end of a space distress call.
@ddebenedictis3 жыл бұрын
Plus, the distress signal came from a ship that is 2 light years away. They have long since died.
@Dennayy3 жыл бұрын
Skinwalker
@87you87tube3 жыл бұрын
I see that you won't be hit in the head with a golf club. But you also won't be presenting a game of the year award to yourself.
@jimfindlay58993 жыл бұрын
the best piece of advice i was given in a long time was to simply pick a card and play it. i have often been plagued by indecision and i have found it most beneficial to pick a choice out of a handful and live with that decision. if a few decisions have pros and cons that outweigh each other and you have a time constraint, pick a choice sooner. this allows you to tackle with consequences sooner
@kepspark3362 Жыл бұрын
Interesting! Can you add more to this? More things you've learned regarding this... I'm plagued by chronic indecision in my life as well.
@ATFPredator Жыл бұрын
The best advice I've ever heard for indecision was to flip a coin.... the result doesn't matter, it's HOW you feel about the outcome that does. It may help with your decision if you are immediately disappointed by the flip.@@kepspark3362
@yasininn76 Жыл бұрын
This quite literally just leads you to bad decision making. You have to weight cons and pros and decide what's best, not leave it up to chance
@jimfindlay5899 Жыл бұрын
@@yasininn76 do you know what indecision means?
@yasininn76 Жыл бұрын
@@jimfindlay5899 yes, and that's the exact opposite of what I said to do.
@pondripple3 жыл бұрын
I'm definitely on the side of save the miners. You've already answered their distress call and given the 30 imminently threatened workers hope. It's also more likely that they're supporting families at that age than college grads and their families are likely more dependant on them surviving than the wealthy who often have a substantially more effective safety net. The wealthy graduates may have more collective prospective years, but they're also more likely to survive than the miners running out of oxygen anyway. A luxury ship drifting may not even have a serious enough collision to prevent them from all making it. So you save the workers who unequivocally will die and then haul it over to the cruise ship asap to save everyone you can. If you're able maybe get someone on the line with the college grads as there may be something that can be done to mitigate the loss of life while they're waiting for you to be able to swing around and get them.
@epjarvis12852 жыл бұрын
I would assume that the miners have life insurance if they're doing a job like that so their family would likely be taken care of. Also I think the whole point of the video is that everyone is going to die from one ship and everyone will survive from the other. If I were to try and make a decision logically I would have to go down the route of who is likely going to benefit the whole of the human race more with their life? Young, wealthy graduates are probably more likely to innovate and create something that could benefit a lot of people from all different classes in the world. Also they are more likely to create jobs so I would probably pick them.
@impish_snake35262 жыл бұрын
@@epjarvis1285 Most people can’t afford good life insurance. And if the workers are impoverished laborers forced to work in SPACE, they most likely can’t afford any type of insurance.
@epjarvis12852 жыл бұрын
@@impish_snake3526 As they're are going to space for work their employers would likely supply the life insurance. Also there was nothing in the video that mentioned they were forced to work. So assuming that they applied for the job they would likely have health insurance provided.
@impish_snake35262 жыл бұрын
@@epjarvis1285 I said forced to work in space. They have no other option. Having to work in a. DANGEROUS environment to make sure your family doesn’t starve IS being forced.
@epjarvis12852 жыл бұрын
@@impish_snake3526 Yes I understand what you're saying but what I'm saying is that there is no indication that they're being forced. That's like saying a soldier is being forced to work because they're in a dangerous environment. Maybe they chose to work in space because it's more lucrative than working on earth?
@quitequeerquesadilla3 жыл бұрын
I adore the way this one is animated. It feels like you're reading a classic children's book, like The Little Prince, except you're actually being put in charge of whether people live or die!
@ProfessorFinessor593 жыл бұрын
It feels like a Roald Dahl book!
@artiseen3 жыл бұрын
@@ProfessorFinessor59 True!
@littledudefromacrossthestr57553 жыл бұрын
No
@aservant12843 жыл бұрын
Paper bag princess
@shravanbhat73893 жыл бұрын
Lol is the little prince book so famous ?? I never knew It's a part of the English Syllabus in India 😂
@jacobhernandez4494 Жыл бұрын
My answer was save the workers first since they have limited oxygen. The people heading towards the astroid belt aren't actually in any real danger, as astroids in the belt are hundreds of miles apart from each other. Your chances of hitting one are almost zero. You have time.
@Saucynugget7 ай бұрын
This isn’t literal, it used as a metaphor to understand more simply and more creatively.
@BatmanBeyondBelief5 ай бұрын
@@Saucynuggetthen they should have picked a better example
@michaelpettersson49194 ай бұрын
@@Saucynugget True, bad example. I would have placed them in a decaying orbit around a planet or a moon instead.
@SoulSoundMuisc3 жыл бұрын
First distress call has priority, especially if it was already answered. Second vessel would be advised to board life craft and await pickup. On a more utilitarian point, saving thirty who already provide an essential service that keeps even your own vessel safe (a station could be very vital to a vessel) versus people whose lives may amount to much or may amount to nothing at all. Saving the laborers makes far more sense.
@Moonmedal3 жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing. The workers called first, they have more people in it, inside their space ship and the college people didn't have as much weight in immediate usefulness in the moment, and they might even not even come tk be useful to tge society in the future, I rather stick to the more people who can be more useful now, the fact that they are less fortunate just make me wanna help they even more tbh
@Legacy-sw7bv3 жыл бұрын
I feel like it's a bit of a gamble when you consider the usefulness of the people on each ship. The workers are guaranteed to be useful in the moment; but one or more of the college students, with their opportunities, may become an innovator and responsible for the next technological/scientific breakthrough. Assuming this is the case, if you save the students, you'll ensure humanity develops further. Assuming none of them actually become scientists/engineers/innovators/etc., you've thrown away a perfectly good batch of laborers, AND discouraged more from applying as they've seen the fate of those before them. Knowing the students' histories and classes would help you make this sort of decision, but there's no time to access all their records even if you'd be allowed. In addition, the workers are mostly manual laborers. While we'd be lacking this group, and such an event would discourage further applicants, there'll still be some laborers willing to apply, and far more people can do manual labor than be a genius. Think of it this way: You go back in time to 1875, and a random group of college students from Graz faces the same dilemma (facing certain death alongside more workers than them, relying on you to make the choice). You can save the workers, ensuring their labor skills are around. You can save the college students, with the hope that one of them becomes an innovator. Now, saving the workers may mean that a child gets to grow up with their father, or there are more hands to complete a project, while you sacrifice the students that didn't really amount to anything significant overall. At the same time, Nikola Tesla may have been among those college students you sacrificed, dying before he could make his contributions to the world. More than ethics is at stake here. At the same time, without the ability to see the future, one wouldn't be able to know which choice to make pragmatically. Without knowing the students or the workers, one can't make an educated guess as to how either option turns out.
@SoulSoundMuisc3 жыл бұрын
@@Legacy-sw7bv while your point may be a valid one, I do not gamble on the Maybe or Could Be of a young person. I've seen geniuses become useless addicts, bright stars burning out. I've watched promising talents squander their gift over a trifle. I've witnessed brilliant and driven young people end up throwing it all away for a moment of passion, there to work a dead end job for the rest of their days. I've also seen mediocre people become successful. Unremarkable folks become concert pianists or flutist. A poor girl go on to start her own radio broadcast station. A mild mannered mouse of a girl go on to work for JPL. I've seen hillbillies become heros, saving babies from burning buildings, and well brought up youths of influence go on to do unspeakable things to children. I don't put stock in Maybe. I care little about Could Be. Show me the output of a life, then I'll wager.
@christophera45273 жыл бұрын
@@Legacy-sw7bv They are rich students, meaning useless spoiled brats. One out of those 20 might pass exams by themselves while the others probably paid their way in. Their parents are the ones that might have worked smart and built something, and they can have more kids or already have. They have every chance to create a new genius if they so choose. While the workers have actual use, they're objectively more valuable than a "possible genius" (unless all the students had the best scores at any health career)
@Legacy-sw7bv3 жыл бұрын
@@christophera4527 Well someone's bitter. Did you read the transcript of each student that comes from a wealthy family to determine their grades and whether they're trying or not? Did you unlock the secret to two people breeding a genius mind or changing one of their kids into one? If so, do share! Humanity could definitely use it! I'd have thought it a lot easier to find a man that can do manual labor than to have someone who can easily understand complex physics, calculus, engineering, and other physics of the universe.
@adamdavidsoddities85733 жыл бұрын
While he was using the scale to measure the happiest choice and then flipping a coin, they all perished. RIP
@lillymirembe44743 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@fynngreen003 жыл бұрын
I feel like there’s a moral/ethical argument for spending all the time debating the ethics 😂
@souka73983 жыл бұрын
Loooooooooooooool
@MusicMan1987x3 жыл бұрын
The happy faces belonged to former crew members that were used in this process.
@L_Maris3 жыл бұрын
I’d save the workers. Here’s my reasoning: - For starters, they’re 30 people, that’s 10 people more. - The workers probably have families that depend on them. Let’s say on average each has one spouse and 1.5 children that depend on them economically, that’s an additional 75 people. If the workers die, their families will be worse off than they already are. Of course the students also have families that will be very sad if they die, but they’re rich and don’t depend on them economically, plus they can pay therapy. The workers’ families will suffer both economically and emotionally. - Yes, the students are college students and they have so much potential. As some people have argued, they might become neurosurgeons, give huge amounts of money to charities, etc. and in the end contributing much more to society than 30 workers. But: -- Potentially. They might also end up not contributing much to society. Maybe none of them end up becoming doctors or scientists or whatever. Maybe they end up exploiting workers! Maybe they end up passing laws that benefit other rich people and negatively affect most people. -- The workers’ children also have potential. If the workers die, the kids lose a parent and their economic support. They might end up having to leave school and their potential being lost. - They say “as you approach the Telic 12, you receive a second distress call...”, which mean I am already on my way to the workers’s ship. I’d waste valuable time if I changed courses now. - The workers are losing oxygen and they will certainly die if my spaceship doesn’t arrive on time. And as other people have pointed out, it’s not very likely that the asteroid belt will hit the students’ spaceship. I think the workers are more of an urgency.
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
Your argument is good but the rich kids have much more potential than the worker's kids due to them having more access to good education.
@vegasbaby33923 жыл бұрын
He said the average life of middle aged was 45, not 30... And to make the calculation that every middle aged person is married and has a family with at least one kid or more is A LOT of assuming!!!
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
@@vegasbaby3392 Yes, but the most likely some of their kids are already adults by now since in poorer countries people marry earlier and thus they have kids earlier. And since the average age of the students is 20, they still 60 years a head of them while the workers only have 35. So I'd choose the students.
@samenjaimy3 жыл бұрын
@@billcipherproductions1789 that's dependent on where they are from, I'd say.
@dosadoodle3 жыл бұрын
@@billcipherproductions1789 That's likely not true. Many tradespeople produce far more goods and services than many college graduates. These trades workers are also probably highly specialized, with many likely having themselves gone to college (many trades require education beyond high school). This is surely especially true if they are building or repairing a space station. Work in the trades is often misunderstood and underappreciated by many people who don't work anywhere in that sector. And no, I'm not in the trades, but I've learned enough about them to know they are greatly undervalued.
@CoverBydAn Жыл бұрын
I remember watching The 100 and the girl forced everyone to eat deceased humans to survive. She eventually said that she forced everyone so that they did not have to make that choice. In a world where you cannot satisfy everyone, the decision maker should be empathized with, not blamed for making a decision that failed to make you happy
@GRosa2503 жыл бұрын
I completely disagree with the coin toss idea. I would unquestionably save the ship with the 30 middle age workers. Number one, they requested help first. Number two, there’s 50% more lives at stake. Number three and probably most important, the 30 workers most likely have families that they’re working to support. So not saving the 30 workers could potentially have devastating consequences for many additional people who are not on their ship.
@puromulaaurifer79683 жыл бұрын
I'm with you.
@AvoKiwi_12523 жыл бұрын
I agree 100% with this. Either way, the college students set themselves up for this, since schools typically send liability forms and such, so they most likely knew what may happen. Not to mention the workers most likely have families to provide for, whether it be their own or someone else’s. Plus the college students are there for VACATION, not for a good cause, like providing for one’s family. So overall, if I could only pick one, I’d go with the one that’s for a better cause.
@ajfanotreally25233 жыл бұрын
@@AvoKiwi_1252 it’s funny watching everyone hypothetically defend which situation they prefer 😂
@nicklasveva3 жыл бұрын
What if the students are studying quantum physics that may lead to a huge revolution benefiting all of humanity? "Student" isn't a very good description, because a student could be studying something really useless like art or music. Or they could be studying to become a surgeon or a nuclear reactor worker.
@Mica_T3 жыл бұрын
@@AvoKiwi_1252 I'm pretty sure thats not how liability works. By your logic, the workers would have accepted the liability and risk of their transport failing and killing them too. A side note is that though the college students are fewer in numbers, they are also 10 years younger on average. They also have more potential economic value as college students if they were to live and graduate and if we assume a positive correlation between wealth and lifespan, they would also live longer. There's a pretty good reason why there's no straightforward answer to this dilemma.
@meejinhuang3 жыл бұрын
I would save the Telec 12 because they sent their SOS first and I'm already on course to the Telec 12. I would also judge it on which ship is closest. You have to approach this with logic and not emotion or potentially no one gets saved. This is also a firefighters dilemma. A firefighter will approach this with training, safety and logic.
@chace61823 жыл бұрын
The reason I would’ve chose the one with workers instead of the kids on vacation is that after saving them I could have them work on my ship for saving them, and not have to pay as much for repairs.
@rashikbhaithacker49353 жыл бұрын
@@chace6182 🤣🤣
@grimwolf4853 жыл бұрын
@@chace6182 what is this mass effect you save the kids for the thousands of dollars and some very powerful allies in the government
@majororion23743 жыл бұрын
@@chace6182 I had a similar idea, but mine came with salvaging their ship to make mine faster or to make a smaller, faster spacecraft that can get to the college students in time, considering that they lost only 1 thruster and the asteroid belt means chances of survival are certain, but not zero. Therefore save the workers 1st, then save the students 2nd, the students (betting someone know to fly a ship) can mitigate some of the damage or by sheer luck avoids all of it. With the workers saved making a mini variant of that ship, but moves much faster with repair kits, and an extra thruster to repair the student's ship, both sides can actually be saved, just requires some luck or sheer will to get both sides at once. And that's just me assuming our ship does not have a smaller faster mini vessel equipped already that's a whole 'nother story!
@nil_system3 жыл бұрын
@@majororion2374 save telec 12. not having escape pods is on the rich kid cause the rich could afford to have it but they didn't bother
@carlangelo6533 жыл бұрын
We had a service training class in college as preparation for disasters. One of our professors said that in the event of a disaster you will need to make difficult choices. He gave us a rule of thumb to follow. In order of priority you go. 1. Save who is most likely to survive. 2. Save the one who will be easier and safer for you to save. I always keep that in the back of my head.
@Gilleban3 жыл бұрын
I commented in agreement to this line of thought in another comment, but added that in triage there is another category...those too far gone to save, where trying to save them might cost so much in time and resources that less-severe cases might themselves die. Save the ones you know you can save over those who might already be too far gone.
@i.m.23912 жыл бұрын
@@Gilleban Rule #2 already covers that logic.
@ChemistTea Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I also learned that. It's part of "triage" training.
@michaelpettersson49194 ай бұрын
In this scenario, leaking oxygen is not a threat to YOUR ship. A fire that may cause an explosion could be. Real asteroid belts are known to be virtually devoid of asteroids so those students must have chosen to study one up close. It is even likely that they got too close and was smacked by a rotating asteroid and that is why their ship is damaged. You would need to get that close in order to carry out a rescue. That is a dangerous rescue operation to save people that didn't have the good sense to stay away from danger in the first place. A real-world analogy is people that need rescue from hillsides in locations where a helicopter most hover dangerously close to a cliff face in order to rescue them. This is why it is one reason why base jumping are flat out illegal in some places.
@nicholasharvey70392 жыл бұрын
I would probably prioritize the first distress call. I would have been on my way to help them anyway, and then I got another distress call. So I wouldn’t turn back and choose a different ship because I weighed the happiness possibility. I’m already on my way to save lives, I’ll go ahead and follow through with it
@willy4170 Жыл бұрын
it’s never said that the miners “called first” but it was a signal they broadcasted to any ship that was listening, so they arrived at the same time, it was the captain of the ship that decided to display it first.
@rydergolde3169 Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170 "as you approach Telec-12, you receive a second distress call" directly from the video, meaning you only receive the second SOS *after* the first one also, unless we assume communications are faster-than-light (FTL), the distance would influence which call is received first, meaning that it would also be more practical to save the workers vs the college vacationers once you factor in distance based on the signal delay in the case of FTL comms, however, the delay between calls would be entirely dependent on which call was sent first, and so in this case the first response would still be the workers I don't know where you're getting "it was the captain that decided to display it first"
@Chu6um3 жыл бұрын
Practicality also has a part. Saving those running out of oxygen would be more prudent as it's an actual result if left unaddressed. Those college student are heading toward a danger, but no assured result is set. Improvised adaptation of what isn't broken can be used to at least mitigate the threat to them.
@willy4170 Жыл бұрын
But there is also the counter argument as if you break one thruster, there is nothing you can do, since it’s outside the ship, while an oxygen leak inside the ship, most of the time is fixable with some jury rigging.
@idcgaming518 Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170not in space it ain't. Also, movies have lied to you. Unlessthe asteroid belt was made yesterday, there will be next to no asteroids actually inhabiting the space with a few hundred kilometers of wherever the ship enters as asteroid belts are actually usually sparsely populated.
@jojomaster7675 Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170 I would assume a luxury spacecraft should be able to live without 1 thruster. It's just 1 less way to control your flight. Same as an aircraft losing a single control surface (rudder, airleon or elevator), should still be capable of basic manuevers.
@alanxu3936 Жыл бұрын
@@jojomaster7675 Not to mention that it should also have escape pods and multiple redundant life support systems. If anyone dies, it's the fault of the designer/manufacturer of the luxury spacecraft that prioritized style over safety.
@jojomaster7675 Жыл бұрын
@@alanxu3936 Yup. But even if you fully priritise style and comfort over safety and durabillity, I still fail to see the loss of a single thruster having that much of an impact. Sure, if you're manuevering in a tight space it could make you crash, but if you have enough time to send a distress signal, then there should be nothing to worry about. Just lower engine thrust and adjust course with the other thrusters you have left.
@dragoonzzetzz3 жыл бұрын
Once you said “30 workers working for their families”, I knew who I had to save already. Who else is providing for those families? Definitely ain’t the super rich
@anonymousskunk3 жыл бұрын
You think that, but you don’t KNOW that. You’re making an assumption, and it could be wrong. The purpose of the exercise is to make a decision based only on what you KNOW.
@Dorkyoo3 жыл бұрын
@@anonymousskunk the purpose of the exercise is just to make a decision, if you want to assume anything you can
@blueshoes51453 жыл бұрын
@@anonymousskunk but you can make assumptions based on what you see though. And you kind off have to think through before making a descision on the whim.
@abhilashlr92593 жыл бұрын
@@Dorkyoo well then I assume one group is full of bad people and I save the other ship.
@ceoofracism21783 жыл бұрын
That's still a polarized view, you would save ine group because you identify with them, but you would let your prejudice descriminate the other group. As the guy here said: it's kinda easy when you identify with a group , but when you try to take in consideration empathy and exclude your prejudice, thing gets complicated! You aren't living in the "richer" world, you lived one reality, but you didn't live in the other shoes. When you have no group to identify because you identify with all the situation gets harder and the way is to flip a coin. So the answer is simple if you hate one grouo and have a lot of prejudices toward it, but when you dont have it, it's headache. Of course: simpathy, empathy and etc would be a factor to help yoi decide, but your prejudice too.
@chungdha3 жыл бұрын
Save the first ship, 2nd one only lost one thruster they still have many other options to manoeuvre the ship from danger and instruct them too.
@briankeithevans79723 жыл бұрын
Did realize enlisted space force members where allowed on youtube
@YippingFox3 жыл бұрын
I think you're missing the dilema
@markdavidaguilo45443 жыл бұрын
you're missing the point
@marioauditore28593 жыл бұрын
You know we're considering one of the groups will be dead after that, right?
@DespOIcito2 жыл бұрын
yoU'Re misSInG ThE POinT yeah guys that's the joke
@jackdispennett7442 жыл бұрын
For those who say “first call takes priority,” would you divert from a call to put out a one bedroom house fire to a fire in an apartment complex with hundreds of residents, if the latter call were received second?
@suitcaseofsmarts2 жыл бұрын
i absolutely would
@cosmey4492 жыл бұрын
yea and the people who say that are just going by code. this is a ethics debate not a real situation
@jnewcomb Жыл бұрын
It depends, am I the only fire truck able to respond? If I am, then the second call is more urgent because it's a larger structure with more destructive potential as well as a higher human cost. If there are other fire trucks but further away then no, I need to stay with my first call. They need my help and will not get it whereas the other will get help just slightly later.
@matthewhughes8608 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, probably. But that’s not in any way similar to the video. Things are mostly even in the video, so it’s fair to say that who called first influences the decision.
@Elsupremo229 Жыл бұрын
depends on the distance, if you are being closer to one house than the other you may be able to stop the most damage of the fire and then go to the apartment complex
@brain27283 жыл бұрын
I would have choose the passengers (the first distress call) because first came first serve. +No guilt later.
@islandmaster50643 жыл бұрын
There's another factor that isn't voiced in the story. The first ship is leaking air and has certain death in so many minutes. The second ship, while without a thruster, should have means of controlling direction. Also, we can assume that the asteroid belt has gaps amd spaces between the space rocks, leading to a lowered chance of certain death. In terms of chances, the first ships has a lesser degree of survival ability than the second. Therefore logic can assume the first ship should be saved
@reptocilicus3 жыл бұрын
Without thrusters, they couldn’t control their direction. And this is a Star Wars asteroid belt, not a real life one. There are rocks all over the place going every direction. You can assume they face certain death for the purposes of this.
@Kipwich3 жыл бұрын
In a real situation, that could be true. However, this is a hypothetical situation intended to set up a moral dilemma. For the sake of discussion, it may generally be best to assume that the only two options presented are truly the only options, rather than adding on stuff that was not originally presented. Otherwise, it somewhat defeats the purpose behind asking the question, to set up a moral dilemma and teach people about possible moral approaches. The spirit is more important than the letter. Also, your assumptions are not necessarily true. The ship may have some means of controlling direction, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that those are powerful enough to actually help avoid obstacles. We might assume that the asteroid belt has gaps, but it could also be the case that the ship is headed directly on a collision course towards an asteroid, making those gaps irrelevant.
@lordfurby26963 жыл бұрын
good point but i personally feel the need to save the works over the 2nd ship cuz 1 workers called 1st XD and 2nd the other ship passengers was drinking if there is drinking there is smoking so they prob gonna die soon any ways
@gustavbruunkjr51233 жыл бұрын
It states that the student would "all be doomed" without help
@ashikgurung33913 жыл бұрын
I think if we're gonna look at it that way, you could also add that college students being in a luxury ship would also have more alternative safety measures put in place like ”lifeboat" ships whereas the workers ship could be the opposite where safety has been compromised for profit..etc. overall, I would most likely choose the workers, mainly because they likely have more dependents (spouses, children, old aged parents) relying on them for survival. Also, 30 workers would also mean more families/people ultimately affected in a direct way from their deaths. The argument for college students would be their lost potential.. but it's also arguing about what could be instead of what already is.
@petelee24773 жыл бұрын
The likely hood of success could also play a role. If a dr. has 2 patients who both need surgery but one needs a type of surgery that has estimated 10% chance of success and another surgery has a nearly 85% chance of success you focus on the person with the highest chance of survival. Remember we care about results not effort, a life we did save is far more important than a life we tried to save.
@magentamonster3 жыл бұрын
That's also why six-month-old babies are cuter than both younger and older individuals. Younger babies are less likely to survive, so parents have less of a incentive to take care of them. And older individuals are less dependent in their parents. Six months is when humans are likely to survive, but also vulnerable. It is better to take care of them than other ages.
@millakaybarker2 жыл бұрын
saving the workers not only saves them, it also helps their families with income and can help them get out of poverty / poor areas. saving the college students would result in not only the families of the workers struggling from grief and more poverty, but also would leave the poor people with a sense of guilt about the fact they couldn't help their families. also, it helps to look at the fact of who sent their request for help first. age, wealth and status doesn't guarantee your life to be saved over others.
@willy4170 Жыл бұрын
The part about leaving the people with the sense of guilt would apply also to the other group? And also considering that the call arrived at the same time
@impish_snake3526 Жыл бұрын
@@willy4170 actually, the call from the workers came first with enough time to chart a course to them. Besides, wealthy parents grieving can take time off of work to arrange funerals and process their feelings, while the suddenly orphaned children and widowed spouses of the workers will immediately have to find a new job and will not be afforded time to grieve from the governing body NOR from their employers.
@impish_snake3526 Жыл бұрын
@cocococop1316 Time travel is, at best, a highly theoretical form of physics which would have an unending array of consequences that may even defeat the purpose of using it, and at worst, the fantasy of a six-year-old who doesn’t even know that gravity exists. You want to make a bet on that?
@impish_snake3526 Жыл бұрын
@cocococop1316 U sure bro?
@basteala5253 жыл бұрын
There are a couple intangibles about the coin flip that are actually kind of helpful. First...it doesn't take a lot of time, but Second, more importantly--once you see the result, you'll likely have a gut feeling or emotional response to that result. If the choice forced on you feels wrong, you could elect for the other one.
@RextheRebel3 жыл бұрын
I do this with a dice in my pocket for day to day things. Whenever it rolls on a number I shirk at, I choose the opposite option instinctively.
@drtayyabali23903 жыл бұрын
While we can rightfully argue about the merits and demerits of each decision pathway, I think the video highlights something more important: When a decision-maker is faced with a tough call and they go through the aforementioned thought process 1) An outcome acceptable to everyone is impossible to achieve 2) The decision-maker should be empathized with rather than vilified or burnt on the stake owing to the complexity of the decision. Unfortunately, we as a majority or a court of law can argue against the discourse taken by the decision-maker and even pass a harsh judgment against them. We should review our approach so it has some bearing on legal or moral interpretations of situations like these.
@idcgaming518 Жыл бұрын
@@wendellparham5545indeed. If you were to let the miners die, I don't think their families would be able to sue you, as they would likely be more focused on surviving. Meanwhile the families of the graduates absolutely can afford to sue you into the ground. Which also means they could have afforded the best emergency measures, which based on what has happened, they didn't purchase. Basically, they likely cheaper out and want you to take the fall.
@Lucciii32 Жыл бұрын
@@idcgaming518how can someone sue you for not saving them ? 🤨
@michaelpettersson49194 ай бұрын
@@Lucciii32 Their relatives can.
@odysseus2313 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to see that, beyond what choice we make about whom we save, our intuitions are guided by the stereotypes that we have about certain groups. The students are stinking rich, will probably live a long life of pleasure, while the workers are poor, have miserable lives, families to support, etc. I'm not saying these are wrong, as averages over certain groups of people they might be quite correct, but still they are and remain stereotypes.
@arminislam68053 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with you
@agnato68383 жыл бұрын
Stereotypes intended as biases are best estimates under the condition of not knowing anything else, so what's wrong about using them? (again, under the hypothesis of not knowing anything else)
@odysseus2313 жыл бұрын
@@agnato6838 As I said, I'm not saying it's wrong to think that way. I'm saying it's interesting that we do. One moral stance, for example, could be to say that unless you have sufficient information about those people to decide who to save (or even whether to save anybody), you can't make intelligent assertions about the consequences of your actions. Thus the "flip a coin" solution might the best; or, even more radically, not to do anything at all! Although I do doubt that anyone has a moral intuition of not acting in this circumstance.
@agnato68383 жыл бұрын
@@odysseus231 I think little information is better than no information. So, the expected gain of flipping a coin can't be higher than the expected gain after taking a rational decision based on the few information we have. I think the value of flipping the coin is in avoiding any responsibility, that probably outweights any weak reasoning about whose life is worth more
@gustavbruunkjr51233 жыл бұрын
@@odysseus231 By the "moral stance" you suggested's logic, we can't know if all the people abort one ship have terminal brain cancer (without knowing it themselves either), and thus we can never make an intelligent decision about who is best to save. You might say that this would be extremely unlikely, but then we're back to odds. It all comes down to chances and expected value, so the stance that "we can't be sure if the stereotypes are right, so let's flip a coin" is bad in my opinion, unless you know for a fact that the uncertainty is extremely high. Even still I think it's best to go with the option that has the highest expected value
@BioTheHuman2 жыл бұрын
I'm for " the first distress call and the one who can be saved without making my life too much at risk" squad, but, reading the other answers, especially those that involved other more "difficult" scenarios, a thought struck me: Maybe, we should just save who our "instinct" suggest us in that moment. We should accept our biases and just go with the flow of our mind. I say this because, if we think about it, there is no right choice, because our universe isn't build that way. Our universe is build on death and chaos, so in this case, maybe the toss a coin is indeed the truly right choice since it follows universe rules, but, why don't we add a third option in this case? (Save nobody). After all, if we really want to follow randomness, this must be a possibility. Who says that the people we save won't become ,or they are, very bad people, or maybe, if both students and workers die, new people will take their positions and so will get a better life because of it (imagine a poor man that finally have job in this way and can feed his 10 children and one of those children will be the next Human Genius, or maybe he will kill next Human Genius' father, but thanks to that, the son with no father will become the next "HG") obviously I can continue infinitely and imagine an endless array of possibility. But, there is a problem about the "follow random", because we are humans, and we usually don't do that. When your life is at risk, do you stop and toss a coin to see if you should survive or not? After all, who knows how many lives will be improved thanks to your death? So why should we follow it in this situation? We have to follow our human nature, which is of course what makes us interested into helping others in the first place, but, the problem is that thinking "rationally" is our nature too, so it totally makes sense that we make "moral dilemmas" 😅 So that's why I said, "help who you think it's right to in that situation", because, in the end, in the big picture, your decisions really doesn't matter, I mean, it does, but you can't predict it, and others will be happy that you helped someone no matter what. So, the only important thing to do for us humans, is to try and save someone, without thinking too much is that was the right choice or not.
@psychopomp93512 жыл бұрын
Saving no one will amount to your backlash the media or the government will surely question why you didnts saved either sides when u can clearly save one worst case scenario is you go to jail best case is you get fired
@BioTheHuman2 жыл бұрын
@@psychopomp9351 In fact I take note of it in my comment. I end the comment saying "for us humans what's really important is to save someone in need"
@syntheticant81722 жыл бұрын
ALthough there is no way to call your comment incorrect, you have literally thrown logic, ethics and emotion out the window because...? Why would we listen to prejudice over ethics? This seems like a way to avoid the moral burden of letting at least 20 people die.
@BioTheHuman2 жыл бұрын
@@syntheticant8172 I'm sorry but I didn't understand your comment, if you'd like to explain it further I'd appreciate it :)
@miguellombertlora2648 Жыл бұрын
Im with you men, i think maybe we are not physically able to get an objetive answer on whose deverse to be saved. And your personal instincs is the "right choice" justified by the same fact that you felt it, and no other thing.
@QsPracticalNonsense3 жыл бұрын
What a weird feeling it was to change my mind so often between the decision to save one or the other. Food for thought indeed!
@basinox3 жыл бұрын
Its simple in my world view: you save the workers as their deaths would generate little to no media attention, turning them into a statistic and creating no change to prevent future tragedies. Meanwhile the death of the students will create heavy media outrage, promting manufacturers to fix the problem in their machines and preventing future deaths.
@nathalie_desrosiers3 жыл бұрын
I like the way you think. Practical 'til the end.
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
I will save the students because they have the potential to build safer spaceships.
@cephalonbob153 жыл бұрын
Big brain time
@apani73483 жыл бұрын
interesting reasoning.
@syasyaishavingfun3 жыл бұрын
Or not save both and create double to hype
@dzarko553 жыл бұрын
In these situations, I think going by instinct is somewhat undervalued. Do what feels right in the situation and live with it. I’d probably pick the 30 workers, for reference. I can give a load of reasons why, but they’d just be justifying a conclusion that’s already been made.
@LongNguyen-nd2bt3 жыл бұрын
This moral dilemma in reality though often isn’t up to a single person, and requires a defined decision-making process. Take organ allocation or any form of medical triage on a larger scale, and we’d have to actively think about how the system is designed and justified.
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
I'd go for the students since they have their entire life a ahead of them still while the workers have already spent half of their lives.
@krapto34673 жыл бұрын
It's a tough decision. Those workers are likely the backbone of their families,which too likely has children that are completely reliant on the pay of their parent worker. The death of a lower class worker is economically far more devastating to their family than it is for the families of those well off children on a vacation for whom it would be an entirely emotional loss and are more than likely insured with private funded monetary backings. Meanwhile those students are more than likely growing up to be professional assets to a growing economy.However how this effects the people within is dependent completely on National policy and as such is redundant.Even the child of the worker may be growing up towards a professional field on the backs of the capital earnt by their worker parents.
@enricbf84753 жыл бұрын
@@crowsarebros2645 not to mention the wealthy families are more likely to mourn and move on, while the poorer ones might loose all their income and struggle much much more. And aren't the wealthiest ones on earth generating that wealth from underpaying those very same endangered workers?
@KAG17763 жыл бұрын
@@billcipherproductions1789 how many of those ricks kids can fix the space station? Bet none could and none probably care to... workers pave the way
@jasimyasser8578 Жыл бұрын
One more aspect to consider if you're thinking about the happiness generated is the future lives of both parties. The miners are likely to live a sadder future doing menial jobs while the college students are likely to live a more comfortable life in the future.
@NAEVAN238 Жыл бұрын
i was looking for this comment thanks
@micahbush53973 жыл бұрын
It's a trick question. Asteroid belts are actually quite empty, so veering into one is far from certain death. Also, I think a question worth considering is whose deaths will be worse. For the workers running low on oxygen, the depletion of the oxygen supply isn't instant death; the air in the compartment will continue to deteriorate until it's too bad to breathe, which could take hours. On the other hand, if the students' ship is hit by an asteroid, they will either be killed by the collision or be ejected into space, where the lack of oxygen will cause them to pass out in about 15 seconds. In either case, their deaths will be far quicker and less painful. Really, the only reason I can see for preferring the students over the workers is fear that their rich parents will sue.
@BobanGucu3 жыл бұрын
I had a professor that was teaching us first aid and he exclaimed: "If I were to choose how will I be executed or die, I would choose a bag over my head. Why? Oxygen level slowly go down and you find yourself sleepy and drowsy, you wake up, go back to sleep and repeat slowly until death. There would be no bleeding and no pain whatsoever." How much truth is in that sentence, I do not know, but I think it's very good argument.
@phillip21693 жыл бұрын
@@BobanGucu I think he meant in a solid place without recycling air. A bag would collapse and expand making it hard to breathe and hurts the lungs
@w.t.51363 жыл бұрын
@@BobanGucu If it were me tbh Id prefer to get a super lethal dose of poison that would kill quickly. Bag is certainly easiest to pull off though!
@ConnorCocoas3 жыл бұрын
You’re the smartest one in class, totally forgot asteroid belts are mostly empty. Duh when you think about it
@ZombieOfBerlin3 жыл бұрын
True, but remember, the workers' ship is also ON FIRE. Which means a) death by burning is also on the menu and b) since fire also needs oxygen the air would become unbreathable faster than normal (most casualities in fires are from smoke, not from the flames). On the other side the cruise ship has lost "a thruster". Shouldn't that mean, that there is more than one? So, shouldn'they at least be able to steer away from the densest areas of the asteroid field? As you said, asteroid fields aren't like in the movies. There is a lot of space between the larger rocks. As an aside: Where are the crews of the two ships? Why are we talking to the passengers?
@steelknightsune37163 жыл бұрын
Yeah, a tough thing to get through. But I think the coin flip is one of the best, because it can save a lot of time, in these situations time is essential. And also, my personal thoughts, the party, which sent the signal first, should get the help first. It is also quite fair. It is a kind of a coin flip, but it was flipped by the cosmos itself. But there is one thing I am certain of. Take the decision which is closest to your values, so you can live with it. It is not about you being fair, because fairness is subjective by nature. It’s about you living with your choice.
@Operation3Sixty3 жыл бұрын
These thought experiments are kind of silly to me because they leave out important real life details, like were you already responding to the first distress call when the second one came in, which one are you closest to, how much resources do you have, etc... It's easy to come up with scenarios like this and say whatever you want to make it seem like difficult problem to solve. But, in real life, the detailes aren't as convenient, and there may be a clear choice or protocols in place for these situations
@Korry3 жыл бұрын
Someone is drowning, lemme' flip a coin real quick
@FullyAlive333 жыл бұрын
that makes sense, actually The only wrong option would be not saving anybody.
@nikiTricoteuse3 жыл бұрын
Actually, you make a VERY good point.
@OlafJorigson3 жыл бұрын
@@Operation3Sixty Even if you factor in everything it's still up to you to decide. Whatever you come up with, nothing will be of interest to the family you have to explain that you couldn't save their family member. If you can save one of them 100% but not both in any way, whatever explanation you come up with, is only important. At least for your own mental state.
@realtheodore3 жыл бұрын
Reading the comments is so amazing. The human brain is so fascinating, same neurons but every brain thinks so differently and everyone has their unique perspectives about the situation. Blows my mind. What a wonderful thing the brain is.
@shubhammaurya36716 ай бұрын
During the COVID-19 lockdown in India, a real-life incident highlighted this painful dilemma. The government had announced a complete lockdown to control the spread of the virus, and people struggled to cope. Many demanded help to return to their hometowns, including students from a city preparing for competitive exams and laborers/manual workers from poorer states like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. The government arranged buses for the students to get home. But the laborers, with no transportation available, had to walk hundreds of kilometers. Sadly, many died from hunger, heat, and dehydration along the way. The tragedy became widely known when a group of laborers, resting on railway tracks, was run over by a goods train at night. It turned out that many of the students' parents were quite rich and had pressured government officials to arrange transport for them. Meanwhile, the laborers, without such influence or means, were left to suffer.
@shubhammaurya36716 ай бұрын
Even if you consider total lives years here(even though lives were not at stake like in video), helping workers is just choice, but sadly, we don't live in just world
@antihero6153 жыл бұрын
This problem was illustrated several times in “The Dark Knight,” including some coin-flipping as well!
@andresv.88803 жыл бұрын
Lol true, and apparently ,using some hindsight, he made the right choice but was tricked into the wrong one.
@bobkreme21752 жыл бұрын
nice catch
@sheilakijawani25262 жыл бұрын
Where specifically in the movie?
@antihero6152 жыл бұрын
@@sheilakijawani2526 it’s been awhile since I saw it, but the Joker repeatedly creates situations where Batman(or others) has to make choices. The big ones are with two boats, or Rachel/Dent.
@coality2 жыл бұрын
@@sheilakijawani2526 In the end of the movie. When 2 kind of people who seperated in 2 ship (prisoner & general people). And each other have the remote to detonate other ship respective
@andrewgalbraith18583 жыл бұрын
It would also depend on how far away each ship is. If the 30 middle-aged workers are farther away than the 20 students, some of the workers may die in the time spent reaching them, so effectively the number you could actually save would be fewer. There are a lot of variables here...
@krad13143 жыл бұрын
how would some people run out of oxygen and not all of them ?
@andrewgalbraith18583 жыл бұрын
@@krad1314 Some lungs absorb oxygen better than other lungs. For example, some of the workers may be heavy smokers and their alveoli couldn't absorb the same amount of oxygen that nonsmokers could per breath. Or some of them might have atelectasis or another physical problem
@moonlightblue91963 жыл бұрын
I dont think its about the technicality
@littlefox83523 жыл бұрын
You missed the point
@andrewgalbraith18583 жыл бұрын
@@littlefox8352 I mean, then what is the point? I don't think there's a single correct answer in this situation
@breizhrudie47573 жыл бұрын
I'd chose the workers for a number of reasons : -First distress call issued -More lives to save, statistically speaking it's better to save more as their loss might deal greater damage -College student have no market value, workers do -And workers are essential, not students. Workers are sent there for a reason : they are needed. Their loss might result in more catastrophic outcome than saving 20 tourists, who might just die if the workers sent to repair the station they'll land at don't make it and cannot sustain the station.
@trollmastermike528453 жыл бұрын
Id pick the rich kids one of their daddy's going to give me bonus for saving their kids
@spidergirl67303 жыл бұрын
I understand most of your arguments but you know that doctors, lawers etc. were students ones, right? Also markest should decide if a human life has value. It always has.
@breizhrudie47573 жыл бұрын
@@spidergirl6730 There is no guarantee they will be of any use. Workers do. Certainty above all. Simple really
@imesae34363 жыл бұрын
Same thought. Guaranteed that they might be useful in the future but their purpose is not in the present so in my case I’ll save the ones who are of use and have a purpose in this time
@spidergirl67303 жыл бұрын
@@breizhrudie4757 I still don't think the marked (a human made think) should decide about a humans worth. I would also have saved the workers. But if something is good for the marked (that mostly works for rich people) shouldn't be a factor. By that children and baby lifes where worthless, th ones of highly trained workes, that at that point are jobless. The same for pragnent people or someone who is handcaped for a few months (broken legs ...).
@abramgafford24042 жыл бұрын
I go for the workers not only because I already set course towards them they have a worse chance of survival on their own Also make sure you send a signal to state which ever one your saving so any other ships in the area know which one to save.
@Apricity_Asmr3 жыл бұрын
Give this narrator his own Netflix series.
@joermnyc3 жыл бұрын
I think in the law of the sea, the first distress call gets the priority, and you try your best to request a nearby ship to help the second call.
@Raziel3123 жыл бұрын
"The flip of a coin.. the only TRUE justice!" Didn't know TedEd had started taking philosophy advice from Two-face.
@arntry80722 жыл бұрын
Saving the workers are a priority since they are the one who called 1st and they are trapped with no options and strictly limited time. While the college students are on a one thruster left vacation space ship, usually any vacation ships cant be commercialized unless there's a "life ship" available for emergencies.
@michaelpettersson49194 ай бұрын
One thruster will not allow for proper navigation, but it should be enough to change course into a random direction if found to be on a collision course towards something.
@benjaminramsey46953 жыл бұрын
Flipping a coin is only reasonable if you've really tried to weigh the two situations by other metrics first and find them equivalent. If there was 1 student and 100 workers, clearly you shouldn't flip a coin to decide which to save. The difficulty then comes when deciding whether the two groups are equivalent enough to warrant flipping a coin.
@tychoMX3 жыл бұрын
Perhaps. But I’d consider maybe the conundrum is not necessarily “the situations are equivalent and I need to differentiate them”, but “I can’t find a method to discriminate them”. So in practical terms, if you can’t establish the priority case in a reasonable time span making the decision randomly is a viable approach to avoid paralysis by analysis.
@-Secret3 жыл бұрын
If it's just one dog or one cat against 100 people you shouldn't flip a coin either. The answer will always and obviously be the animal. 🤔
@icebearwithanaxe50833 жыл бұрын
a trick i use when people find difficulty in making a choice between 2 or more things is writing the options on small pieces of paper, folding them up and letting the person who will make the decision pick one at random. the trick here is to never let them open it, instead ask them what option did they think of when picking up the paper
@DespOIcito2 жыл бұрын
I've heard this but with a coin, where you flip and then hide the coin to see which side you wanted it to land on
@Ilovrdonuts2 жыл бұрын
save and sacrifice. choose to die or to save yourself. rules from the original game applies, except if both chooses to save/sacrifice, then i will do a coin flip
@fitnesschannel39313 жыл бұрын
The answer is pretty easy. Pick the one you think is easier to save. Go for the harder one, and you might find it too hard for you to save, and you've lost both. Just like in planes you put your own oxygen mask first. Since its easier, you're more likely to succeed, and later be able to help others. Attempt to do the harder thing of putting the mask on your child besides you, you might just pass out even before you've successfully put the mask on.
@therealsylvos3 жыл бұрын
That's not what this thought experiment is trying to get you to think about. Assume you have a 100% probability of saving either ship.
@boshra33352 жыл бұрын
Personally, society has the most importance to me. The workers have been sent up there for the sole purpose of serving society, meanwhile the college students were there for their own leisure. I think that, as a space ranger who's supposed to help and protect, I should help the most working and moving ones in society. This is way of thinking is more based on the now, than on the potentials and the ifs.
@Tippex_Official3 жыл бұрын
I’ve always approached this stuff as ‘save whoever has the most potential’ or in ‘you have to escape this thing and only save X number of people’ then I’d go with ‘take enough to save myself, then the ones with the most potential’
@tinytanaka87793 жыл бұрын
Well, you're not in danger, so you don't need to "take enough to save myself" (In fact, take what? Time...? If you did nothing, the other 2 ships died but you'd be safe). Also determining who has the most potential is hard. The workers have more life experience, work experience and know how to fix your ship if it somehow gets damaged while trying to save one or both. But the college students are, pretty much by definition, literally potential. (I mean, many college students even begin working in their field in lower positions/intern and the only thing separating them from a real worker is they're 1 month away from their degree). And similar to the utilitarianism approach, this one also has the same issue. Does more people = more potential? Or does having longer lifespans = more potential? I guess if this was a survival scenario, in the jungle, where you and other survivors are in danger your approach would make sense...but this is more akin to the trolley problem, where you're never in danger (and won't be). You just decide which group of people die and which live.
@willguggn23 жыл бұрын
The workers also provide for their children so a lot of potential is cut short when they're lost.
@majororion23743 жыл бұрын
I prefer finding a way to save both not surprisingly.
@ethan_smith3 жыл бұрын
@@majororion2374 that defeats the purpose of the dillema
@tinytanaka87793 жыл бұрын
@@majororion2374 Well duh, we all do (Unless...) but usually, these are: by the time you rescue one of them, the other has already perished.
@AxielFan2 жыл бұрын
In the time it took to make this subjective moral evaluation, the passengers on both ships died. The chance of success for saving the passengers either ship should also be a factor worth considering, as well as the risk to safety it takes to undertake each rescue mission to your own ship and crew should be considered first.
@zenedhyr7612 Жыл бұрын
When you're still calculating the chance of success, they all already dead. Every distress call is different, also from many different occasion, so there is no way you could prepare beforehand, you need to think fast. Personally, I prefer the coin flip rather than tedious thinking like other thoughts in this video, IF it was a real-life situation. The narrator is right when he said "nobody couldn't argue unfairly over coin flip." It's 50/50 equal chance, so eventough I got lawsuit afterward, I could just said exactly that. In other words, you can't blame me if your luck sucks.
@JohnPeacekeeper Жыл бұрын
This is why I trust my instincts, and I do have good instincts, and when it's all over I sit down and reflect on why my instincts told me to take a certain route
@jojomaster7675 Жыл бұрын
@@zenedhyr7612 You very much can and should be prepared beforehand. Maybe not for every possible variation, but for the base scenarios at least. Besides, you'll learn from experience, as well as through common sense. And basic evaluation doesn't take long. First you need to actually check if saving either one is even worth it. For example: maybe you're low on fuel and can't afford to risk running out, so you don't help either. Or you think that getting near an exploding ship is a bad idea and could kill you and your crew, so due to that you choose the liner. Or you asume the liner is overreacting, as losing 1 thruster is not a huge deal, and thus go in to help the burning ship. All just basic evaluations based on quickly piecing together facts with common sense that will not take any longer than a coin flip. Logic is generally the best solution. Think fast, but think well.
@Carbon_Crow3 жыл бұрын
3:40 "Each person is deserving of equal concern and respect" A *50/50* coin flip would not accomplish this if the people aren't divided 50/50. The coin should be weighted in proportion to the number of people in each group. (In this case, it would be 40% and 60% since the people are in a 2:3 ratio.) To better illustrate this, think about it a more extreme scenario where you have to chose between saving 1 person or 49 people. If you did a 50/50 flip, that one person is clearly being treated with more concern proportionally than the other 49. Therefore, it makes most sense to weight the chance of being picked in favor of the 49 people, giving them a 98% chance.
@flargarbason17403 жыл бұрын
It’s treating both GROUPS equally. We all can agree that the young students are much more deserving than any one worker simply due to their age. Like if I asked would you save a 5 year old or a 50 year old. Pretty much anyone would say the 5 year old simply because they have much more life ahead of them. If it was 20 workers, it would be much easier, but it’s 30 workers to balance out the fact that the students are younger, giving two separate variables to consider
@Carbon_Crow3 жыл бұрын
@@flargarbason1740 _"It’s treating both GROUPS equally_ Yes, but the claim is that it's treating each *person* equally. As for what you're saying about their ages, the whole point of this method is cut out all other variables so everyone is treated equally, regardless of any other traits of each person. (Not that I think that the proposed method nor my variation are the "right" way of making the decision. I'm just critiquing it based on *it's own* goals.)
@ahmadjauhar45623 жыл бұрын
But what if the 1 person is a young prodigy who would contribute do much to society while the 49 people are criminals
@akondar3 жыл бұрын
@@ahmadjauhar4562 What sort of criminals? 49 Murders? 49 Thieves who stole to feed their families? 49 Political Prisoners who stood up against a corrupt and unjust regime? 1 Art Prodigy? 1 Maths Prodigy? 1 Culinary Prodigy? Slapping a quick label on them makes the equation more Biased and Less Fair.
@MissMoontree3 жыл бұрын
Also to those talking about treating equally, it is giving equal chances if it is 50/50. But as long as you save one group and not the other, you are not really treating them equally. Letting someone die is not the same as saving someone. Treating equally is not the goal here. Saving people is.
@dawnnightinger3025 Жыл бұрын
Prioritize needs over wants. The wealthy in this case wanted to take a vacation which ended up putting them in a dire situation, while the workers needed to go to support their families. Plus the rich may in fact survive long enough for you to rescue both. So prioritize the workers first.
@estellehuang14753 жыл бұрын
The heads or tails solution seems to be the most logical, but I wonder if that’s just because the number of lives in each spaceship is almost equal in this scenario? Like, if there were 30 aboard one ship and only 1 aboard another, I’d be more inclined to save the first ship. Side note: the animation was so satisfying to watch
@SunnyKimDev3 жыл бұрын
No, the numbers don't count, even in a 30:1 situation; The 1 person may be a famous doctor that at least 50 critically ill people who need surgery to survive depend on (in space, doctors are scarce!). There may be hundreds of "what ifs" and "maybe"s, where a coin would do justice.
@teodorbarisic20823 жыл бұрын
@@SunnyKimDev what about 7 billion people vs. 1 serial killer
@MaximaToluene3 жыл бұрын
You’re transforming it to the trolley problem
@jakovvodanovic91653 жыл бұрын
Me too.
@cru3her6083 жыл бұрын
@@SunnyKimDev exactly! u cant know anything. mabey 1 of the 30 will become the biggest murderer in history. mabey they will anyways die the next day. u are not god u cant know anything about any of these people. thats y U ALWAYS GO WITH THE OPTIONS THAT SAVES/HELP THE MOST POEPLE! if its 1/2 ALWAYS save the 2. if its 1,000,000 to 999,999 ALWAYS save the 1,000,000
@culde-sac55483 жыл бұрын
just love these animators 3:18 is a reference to the famous photograph "lunch atop a skyscraper". The worker on the left takes out the burger but realizes he is still wearing the space helmet
@xjosyboiix3 жыл бұрын
Saving the 30 people with a greater average age seems like the answer for me, ten more passengers would more than likely mean more familial connections to be effected, the same assumption goes for the amount of people encountered and possibly befriended throughout a longer life that would be negatively impacted by their death/s. Personally I feel the mathematics of quantity of life remaining or possible societal contribution with education goes out the window, in favour of the human factor of trying to minimise the sheer number of heartbreaks of losing ten more individuals.
@AJag-bb6xu3 жыл бұрын
what about if there were 30 students vs 20 workers (rest of scenario being the same)
@StormEnder3 жыл бұрын
@@AJag-bb6xu I would have to go with whichever one was closest in that scenario. It sounded like they had already started to come to the aid of the workers, so there's a greater chance of saving them rather than turning to save the students.
@ethan_smith3 жыл бұрын
@@AJag-bb6xu I would choose the 30 workers
@gummy58623 жыл бұрын
@@ethan_smith No one asked you
@ethan_smith3 жыл бұрын
@@gummy5862 i don't recall asking u if anyone asked
@harrygao76322 жыл бұрын
"Each person is deserving of equal concern and respect... the best way to decide which passengers to save is to flip a coin." But aren't there thirty people in one ship and twenty people on the other??????????
@abdullatifqaddumi88263 жыл бұрын
Since all else is the same, I would argue for saving the ones with the most impact on their surroundings. If the workers die, their families (surroundings) will be worse off than the students, so I would save the workers.
@ignacioandresv31703 жыл бұрын
Impact on their surroundings? How do you measure that impact?
@nopullbacksonlymoon4253 жыл бұрын
@@ignacioandresv3170 im positive he's talking about their families. If the workers die, their families will suffer more as well
@abigailment2 жыл бұрын
Concept. If you were to save the workers, who _will_ die without help, they may be able to assist you in saving the college students, due to their occupation as spacecraft/station repairmen.
@rydergolde3169 Жыл бұрын
unfortunately, as optimistic as this answer is the way the scenario is formatted leaves no room for that both parties are urgently in a life-threatening situation; the workers are losing o2, while the vacation ship is headed right for asteroids even in the video, the people on the luxury ship "are all doomed" if not helped immediately I can only think of two unbiased solutions for this: 1) you save the workers, because you received their distress signal first (and presumably are already en route to help) 2) a coin flip; the coin does not discriminate, it doesn't care which side it lands on
@cadsquade Жыл бұрын
@@rydergolde3169 that's why I hate dilemmas it's always a 3 choice thing, either A, B or hazard, obviously in most real life situations there's always more options than that.
@petrorlov2599 Жыл бұрын
@@cadsquadeMoral dilemmas aren’t about providing realistic problems. They exist to illustrate a concept and make you think about which guidelines, which logic you should follow in your life. For me for example the obvious choice is to save the college students, but others will use coin flip or keep en route to the workers.
@fuzzwobble3 жыл бұрын
My mindset is to save those who are most immediately able to be saved. If one has a higher chance of rescue than the other, save them. Trying to save the more endangered people is risking it for the biscuit. I would probably save the workers, only because rocking up and pumping oxygen / pulling them out is easy compared to running down a luxury cruiser and pulling it free from asteroids. Then there's the fact the workers called first. This is less arbitrary than it seems. The workers called first and help is already en-route, which does afford them a small amount more consideration. The reasoning for call priority is that we don't know what possible scheme the workers abandoned with high risk which might have saved them when we saved the others. By simply receiving the call and beginning to rescue them, the act of rescuing them might have changed their situation from 'dire, low chance of survival' to 'certain doom'. For example, perhaps the workers were discussing knocking each other unconscious and euthanizing the workers who were more sick, older, or who had no families. Maybe their method of safe killing was halted by us saying we were on our way. In this circumstance, they would have killed a fraction of their workers and sent others unconscious, but perhaps the remaining workers would have bought time to repair the breach and they could hobble the survivors closer to safety. Low chance of success, but a chance nonetheless. Remember that the act of even beginning a rescue can change the actions of desperate people, so now the rescue ship has some responsibility towards the ship it was about to rescue.
@BioTheHuman2 жыл бұрын
I too believe that we should help first distress call, but I didn't thought about the "responsability to help since we accepted it", this is a nice pov. But, in the case that the Students' call would have arrived first and than that of the workers? I still think the decision by order is the best, and as you said, you already accepted to rescue, but after all, the workers would be easier to save and without the risk to endanger yourself 🤷
@earthernut40732 жыл бұрын
Well save the party which is most convenient to save. consider the factors like the distance, the difficult of route to reach there, the time required, the probability of number of people who can survive after the rescue mission, also as a rescuer you need to make sure that you don't get hurt in the process.
@harryhill3433 жыл бұрын
1st come 1st served, you gave the workers your word. Word is bond fam 💯
@michikomanalang67333 жыл бұрын
The thing is, my instinct would be to save the workers, but I’d have trouble making that move because those rich kids have parents they’ll leave behind. I’ve seen what mourning a child can do to a parent. Still, those workers may be the primary breadwinners of their families. I guess I’d stick with my choice.
@Ziggletooth3 жыл бұрын
I'd save the kids, there really isn't a tough choice because they win the utilitarian argument not just by total years but since they're educated they're bigger contributors to the economy which affects everyone including NHS funding etc. And secondly they're kids so that wins the deontological imperative, I just feel it's a duty we all should have.
@pucheta94643 жыл бұрын
Ok that makes a lot of sense actually, you are saving their families as well
@Ninjaananas3 жыл бұрын
@@Ziggletooth People do not get less valuable by age. And neither should be argued with contribution to society because that's how privileges are usually justified. And that's very injust towards the socially weak.
@snowcold59323 жыл бұрын
@@Ziggletooth Are they really the bigger contributors? They're just partying while the workers have been working since they were of age to do so, the workers are those who actually make the world run and it's only thanks to them that the rich enjoy their priviledges.
@KAG17763 жыл бұрын
Workers are always needed so id save the workers... its not much to think bout, plus the workers called the sos first...
@eudaimonia05633 жыл бұрын
I wrote a topic about ethics for my mini thesis. Talking about dilemma in ethics is something complicated. But we should realize Life is not just about dilemma. We should fight against WAR, corruption, Global Warming, etc. How many lives would lose from these problems? This dilemma (in this video) tells us that everyone is equal and has same dignity. Everyone should be treated in same way. Dilemma is just about "choice" without intensity. And dilemma is always urgent and it needs a quick decision. My reflection is that there are lot of problems that we should solve without dilemma like i mentioned before. dilemma is dilemma but most of our ethical problems are not dilemma
@davidvarley18123 жыл бұрын
Good point however this question is central to your argument. If Prime minister Nevile Chamberlain hadn't declared war on Germany in 1939 then scientists might not have invented the atomic bomb. Hundreds of thousand, if not millions of Japanese citizens wouldn't have died in Japan in 1945. However the world would only have blonde Ethnic European people and Japanese people on it. This dilemma as real world implications.
@eudaimonia05633 жыл бұрын
@@davidvarley1812 for me, war is obviously against etchis. Comparing WAR with scientist as dilemma is not correct. If we could stop WAR then we would not "use" our intelligence to kill human race
@davidvarley18123 жыл бұрын
@@eudaimonia0563 my dear friend, you seem oblivious to the reality of war and its union with science. One wonders whether you think the United States of America won the war on Japan without the scientific community. Do you think the Americans could have commited nuclear horror upon the people of Hiroshima and Nagaski without atomic science?
@davidvarley18123 жыл бұрын
Without dilemma you wouldn't have war, climate change or corruption. As long as humans have roamed our world and until the day we go exist, dilemma will exist. You can't have ethics without delemma. You can't ask what is moral without asking what is moral. That simple question is your primary dilemma.
@eudaimonia05633 жыл бұрын
@@davidvarley1812 sure.. but we can choose to improve science without WAR. Dilemma means "confused" to choose but WAR is not something confusing to stop. We should stop WAR and at the same we can improve science for better world.
@Curious_Clover6 ай бұрын
Fun fact: When I don't know the answer to a multiple-choice question, I just spin the pen cap 2 times. 1st spin to pick whether A&B or C&D. And then the next spin to choose from those. Up is for A&B, and down is for C&D. This way, I can pick an answer without having to overthink and run out of time as I usually do in elementary. I'd use a coin if I could. But gotta put everything unrelated to the exam in the bag. Also, if I fail to catch the coin, it would be noisy.
@BigmoneyBrickwall3 жыл бұрын
I’d save the first group. He said the second group was heading towards an asteroid belt and I wouldn’t want to head that way
@Lynnie_25103 жыл бұрын
I would choose the workers because they would have a more painful death. an asteroid belt isn't as bad as dying by not having enough air
@steroacorn3 жыл бұрын
@@Lynnie_2510 being deprived of oxygen actually just makes your head fuzzy and you die peacefully
@youtuberewind32873 жыл бұрын
@@steroacorn Are you sure, if it's like holding your breathe or drowning than I think it would be pretty painful.
@crowblossom063 жыл бұрын
@@youtuberewind3287 It’s a slow descent to no oxygen, compared to almost immediately running out of oxygen for the average person. Like Acorn said, it’s slow and gradual enough that you can’t feel it unlike drowning. Also, Muscle Man, the thing is they have no thruster but you do, so you’d be safe
@glo_bin3 жыл бұрын
Plot twist: You spent so much time thinking that they all died anyways
@vrnsieo3 жыл бұрын
Save the workers. They were forced to travel, as opposed to the students. These went into harm's way by choice, choosing a vacation on a ship with subpar propulsion in an unsafe area. Even if they do not survive, others will learn from their mistake and choose better.
@adamgardener86243 жыл бұрын
Like the Titanic ! Never let go, Jack !
@SpaceAgeWolf3 жыл бұрын
Also they were going to do maintenance on a space station I feel like that takes higher priority since if that space station is poorly maintained it could be even more disastrous.
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
I'd save the students not because their rich but because in the long term they can do greater things. But since the entirety of space is dangerous, what will they do stay on Earth?
@billcipherproductions17893 жыл бұрын
@@SpaceAgeWolf But another batch can come.
@KAG17763 жыл бұрын
Id always choose those who work over silver spoons...
@menajee942 жыл бұрын
these are awesome! Keep it up Ted-Ed!
@cizzlebot3 жыл бұрын
My man John Taurek gets it! I always comfortably make difficult choices with a simple coin flip. No guilt. No ethical dilemma. No time wasted. Just a clean, unbiased decision that can be acted upon without hesitation.
@flargarbason17403 жыл бұрын
I do the same. I do it far too often, but using a 50/50 chance to guide difficult decisions completely eliminates any bias or guilt that might come from otherwise making the decision by yourself
@flargarbason17403 жыл бұрын
@Swhy Pretty much when it comes to decisions of equal value. If it’s something more important I don’t, but for mundane things it’s easier to flip a coin instead of overthinking it
@flargarbason17403 жыл бұрын
@Swhy why is that? Want to elaborate? Because there are plenty of reasons why the students are also more valuable. Both have very large pros and cons
@flargarbason17403 жыл бұрын
@Swhy Doesn’t matter what they’re doing at the time of the incident. It’s not like the students aren’t doing anything ever. Could simply be spring break or something similar. Literally every college student has experienced that. The students, being rich and privileged, are far more likely to get a good education and get much better jobs. The workers are easily replaceable and just 30 of them hardly contribute anything compared to what the students will contribute. There’s also no guarantee that all the workers even have a family. Being much younger, the students are much more likely to have living parents (ESPECIALLY if they’re rich, since someone has to make that money)
@dsembers88653 жыл бұрын
To be honest, us humans are emotional beings and in overwhelming situations like these, it is highly unlikely anyone would chose 100% logically. I'm pretty sure the initial choice who to rescue is made in our head with stereotypes, which group of people seems more relatable, emotionally closer or more liked in the environment you grew up in (Or you're simply choosing the ones who called for help first lol). Then you would most likely justify your choice with logical arguments after having already decided.
@studentofsmith3 жыл бұрын
Practically all of philosophy is post facto rationalizations of decisions we've already made.
@sandz0003 жыл бұрын
this is why i feel like bad person because my first and only choice are the students. solely on the basis of potential. ive been reading the comments and most are for the workers with really good reason and still i cant seems to change my mind.
@ThijsAnglim3 жыл бұрын
@@sandz000 it's ok, even though I would stick saving the workers (just barely). The biggest help for the students is that they are very young (and we would typically save a younger person given bare information). The challenge of the dilemma is that both groups still are looking for potential. The workers although are contributing to society and have lived long lives struggle economically and therefore have not lived their dreams. The students meanwhile are young, and they did not have a lot of time in their lives lived out. The difference is, while the students are living luxurious lives, they have experienced little of it while the workers had time, but are they really living the way they want? Are they not trying hard enough? "Its not your fault if you're born poor, but it is your fault if you die poor". What is your thinking, both choices really are a challenge to morality and I believe both sides have moral support.
@llfn17183 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that Google still exists on board the spaceship
@NylfaenNoldoreth6 ай бұрын
The answer is actually easy, and I saw no-one in the comments mentioning it, so here it goes: If you are in open space, en route to the workers, you save the workers, because in order to turn you need to lose all the momentum of setted course first, and then start again towards another target. This is not only time consuming, it very likely will leave you with not enough thruster fuel to reach your original destination afterwards, stranding you alongside everyone else. And if you cannot reach this conclusion in a timely manner, you shouldn't be a space ship captain in the first place.
@tsarfox34623 жыл бұрын
I'm assuming that there are certain caveats in this. As in, you can only save one regardless of how fast you move, and whichever group you choose to save all people in it will survive. That being said I think a coin flip is probably the fairest option, and frankly probably one where you'd feel the least guilty. That being said, there's really no right option; at least you can save some.
@DemPilafian3 жыл бұрын
If you flip a coin, then you made a choice to flip a coin. You may end up feeling unbearable guilt for that choice.
@ruqqaya3 жыл бұрын
they say they can only save one ship at 0:55
@tsarfox34623 жыл бұрын
@@ruqqaya Yeah I know. It's just I keep seeing all types of comments about how you should save the first call because you can more reliably save them and all types of trying to wiggle out of the thought experiment by applying real world rules that defeat the point of leaving it to your moral code. I'm just trying to nail things down to honor the intent of the thought experiment. And I see no harm in reiterating a key point to pre-empt someone trying to have their cake and eat it too. Old habit from my old debate days.
@HaxxorElite3 жыл бұрын
UwU
@anactualfingbottleofranch7473 жыл бұрын
I disagree, saving the workers not only saves more lives and benefits more families, as those workers probably have people who are depending on their income, but the workers have earned their lives with hard work, far more than the rich douchebags.
@CharlesChristena3 жыл бұрын
I would choose the ship running out of oxygen. heading towards an asteroid belt has the lesser chance of death, than the 100% chance of death with running out of oxygen. asteroids are hundreds to thousands of miles apart... they could probably fly through one and hit absolutely nothing.
@incendiary62433 жыл бұрын
He says they are all doomed. All of the passengers on one of the ships will die
@Gr3nadgr3gory3 жыл бұрын
@@incendiary6243 but that's unrealistic. Even the crew running out of oxygen could be suffering an equipment malfunction they solve before you get there. There's too many variables. Especially in space.
@incendiary62433 жыл бұрын
@@Gr3nadgr3gory it doesnt matter if its unrealistic, its the scenario you were given. You cant just cheat out of thought experiments, it defeats the entire purpose
@Gr3nadgr3gory3 жыл бұрын
@@incendiary6243 there is not point to trolley problems. It's a wasted debate that a normal person will almost never find themselves in. If they do they won't solve it with the philosophical implications of the problem, practicality comes first.
@incendiary62433 жыл бұрын
@@Gr3nadgr3gory if you think there's no point, you shouldnt be here
@STWear13 жыл бұрын
In case you find yourself in this situation, remember to always put the coin in your hand blindly. Through experimentation, I discovered that in around 70% of my throws, the coin lands on the same position it started. This won't be true for everyone, so practice your throws. But, to get the fairest result, always blind the throw, just to be sure
@Cristian-pz9kn Жыл бұрын
A better take on this: Ask both ships which one should be rescued. The ship that has a majority vote for themselves loses. Whichever ship has the most selfless outlook is actually the greater quality of humans, and therefore deserves being saved as they are more likely to do better things in the world upon safe return. Similar to the story of two women claiming the same baby. When posed the solution of cutting the baby in half so they both can share, the mother who cries out to have the other mother get custody strictly to save the babies life is the one who deserves to take care of the baby.
@Juniper6 Жыл бұрын
That’s a very fair and good idea however I doubt you will have enough time to ask each ships leader to ask every member whether their willing to let the others save themselves over each other and then get that information back to you
@msmmfdk3 жыл бұрын
I call it the rational thinking, where you respect everyone equally and help the one who mostly need, save the guys running out of oxigen, asteroids in asteroids belts are kilometers away from each other so they are in less danger
@michaelnelson29763 жыл бұрын
Wow this is an excellent short little bomb to drop here. I didn't expect such compact excellence. I agree with Parfit's conjecture. That those who have less are more greatly impacted and that arguably they deserve more help. But I also very much appreciate just treating everything as equal and just flipping a coin. That's fair and balanced for sure, it's elegant and egalitarian
@Gaga6823 жыл бұрын
It more comes to cause and effect since every action has a long term consequences.
@cru3her6083 жыл бұрын
neither are ethical! basically what ur saying is that people who are worse off are more important. it doesn't matter if its 20 kings vs 20 slaves, every human beings life is equal ( unless u know they're deeply immoral ). i can argue the opposite. mabey the people who are better off come first, cuz they are not used to pain, so even a drop of pain for them is really bad. while the others are more used to it. u have no right to judge, u cant decide who is more impacted, who is more in pain, or who will benefit the most. mabey half of the people u save will die in a disease the next day, or 1 of them will become the biggest murderer in history. u are not god. and flipping a coin is basically saying that 20 lives is worth the same amount to u as 30. ALWAYS GO WITH THE OPTIONS THAT SAVES/HELP MORE PEOPLE!
@michaelnelson29763 жыл бұрын
@@cru3her608 You know, I don't know. I think I don't agree with you at all, and it doesn't seem great to engage about this. Sure there can be hypotheticals about what will happen, so I think basing it on what has happened and had occured in ones life to this point is a valid answer. Giving one person a golden ticket through their life, and continuing that trend actively with a decision or yours feels worse than giving a break to fill who have burdened at every turn. Their lives do not exist to support the well off.
@prathameshagashe32193 жыл бұрын
I think Parfit's argument only works if the type of help we're talking about is in the form of material or wealth, like who gets a larger chunk of the welfare money etc It doesn't apply if we're talking about rescuing people. In this case, I think it's better to save the college students, though they may be vacationing rn, since most of them will go on to become productive members of society who will impact a larger number lives positively, as doctors, engineers, scientists or the like Saving skilled labour should be given preference over unskilled labour, as skilled labour requires more resources to create, and contributes to a country's economy much more than unskilled labour.
@Gaga6823 жыл бұрын
@@prathameshagashe3219 If we ignore the fact that college students are rich who will be inhereting the same position as their parents or even get higher one but the pay and priviledge they will be getting from that does not corealte with the prouctivity and value they bring since all that value and productivity depends on workforce they will be exploiting.
@Potatomatoo3 жыл бұрын
I struggle with such questions a lot. Thanks for a genuinely good approach, I'll keep finding more and more of opinions so when such situation occurs i make the best possible decison
@blueshoes51453 жыл бұрын
Which is normal. It shows you are thinking through many possibilities to ensure people survive. But hopefully you do end up making a descision. Cause there is nothing worse than loosing both spaceships.
@Potatomatoo3 жыл бұрын
@@blueshoes5145 true
@michaeldonnelly6747 Жыл бұрын
I would reprogram the simulation in order to rescue both ships!
@honeypickle3 жыл бұрын
To make the decision harder, imagine: 1. You receive the two distress calls at the same time 2. The 20 students are middle schoolers, on a school expedition trip with 5 of their teachers. You personally know some of their parents who are pleading you to save them. 3. The 30 middle-aged workers have families at home, each of them supports 2-3 family members back on Earth. 4. All else equal: probability of saving either ship is the same, the time you have to save the ship is tight (meaning you can only save one), the probability of you endangering your crew's and your own safety is the same, the probability of either ship perishing together with everyone onboard is the same.
@gsftb3 жыл бұрын
Coin toss.. Nothing got harder
@KouNagai3 жыл бұрын
Still workers, more people will be saved. Because those workers have their kids too. Also we can safely say that this is the goverments(or organisation we dont know which are responsible for these trips) fault for not putting enough ships for rescue and not making ships safer.
@amazingking91693 жыл бұрын
If that was the case I’m definitely saving the middle schoolers
@thejonjon50003 жыл бұрын
You almost made it harder, but actually made it easier. Unless you want to face the wrath of 30 adults when they find out who you sacrificed in order to save them, children get priority.
@Viamii3 жыл бұрын
Tbh with those new clauses in place I’d almost definitely save the students since there is a personal connection there. It’s an extremely difficult decision to make but one side holds strangers while the other side holds friends(?)/ acquaintances. Can’t imagine facing the parents after they’ve begged otherwise...
@arforafro55233 жыл бұрын
I think for situations with such a drastic difference in number (30 vs 20) saving the most people seems like the best option, for closer amounts (21vs20 instead of 30vs20) the best choice would be saving either the first ship to send a distress signal or the closest ship if distance is something we're going to consider important for a successful rescue. Objectively measuring a life's worth is something we couldn't do if given a whole lifetime to think about it, much less during an emergency.
@Flyingmushroomman3 жыл бұрын
I feel like the premise is a little skewed to the benefit of the workers. A more balanced scenario would be that both distress signals are caught at the same time, both are undergoing the same oxygen issues, both are equal distance away but we can replace the college students with a lower amount of people of a more impactful profession so in the other ship we have 10 doctors instead of the college students. All things equal we have to really question in terms of value of life and impact to society. Yes the workers have families that rely on them but a doctor may save thousands of lives in their career but is that a thought people would consider in choosing on or the other if their view on life is equal regardless of societal output. Seems more balanced and thought provoking to me.
@vive3352 жыл бұрын
Could be good
@poeticdavide2 жыл бұрын
You're changing the conditions. That isn't part of the dilemma, to begin with
@redfluxbluedawn414 Жыл бұрын
There are two crucial points missing: 1) apart from age/groupsize/firstcalled etc, whose survival most impact the rest of humanity? Perhaps those workers are scarse and only a limited amount of people are able to physically/mentally/skillfully perform the required tasks to keep vital machinery going. Perhaps those students are promising in the fields of eliminating certain diseases, discovering new life forms or inventing unlimited energy. So do you select the sure shortterm solution (workers) or the possible longterm solution (students)? 2) how far away from both parties are you? If the chances of making it in time at either party differ greatly, you would never attempt a rescue at those with significantly lower survival odds (effectively risking losing both parties) In any way, I'd say that a burning spaceship is pretty much doomed in a matter of minutes, while I presume that the drifting towards an asteroid field will take longer The best way to approach the entire situation would actually be to save the workers (assuming you can get there before the fire consumes them), as they have zero chance if you leave them alone. Whereas the drifting spaceship can possibly still drift between the asteroids, a sure hit is not guaranteed, they have a chance of surviving on their own, or at the very least enduring longer until you can swing around and attempt to save them as well.