This app provides a 3D, animated, interactive walkthrough of the two stages of the classic Trolley Problem that is taught in most ethics classes.
The app then walks the user through explanations of the Trolley Problem, including:
-introductions to the philosophers John Stuart Mill and Immanuel Kant and their hypothetical reactions to the Trolley Problem
-two video explanations of the Trolley Problem by TED-Ed and BBC
-an excerpt from a Harvard philosophy course taught by Michael Sandel called "Justice" that introduces the Trolley Problem and its implications
-an excerpt from a tech ethics class exploring the implications of self-driving cars encountering similar situations to the Trolley Problem
The classic Trolley Problem, as formulated by Philippa Foot in 1967, contains two sequential scenarios. The first scenario asks whether you would divert a trolley from hitting five people so that it hits one. The second scenario asks whether you would push an innocent bystander in front of a runaway trolley in order to stop it from hitting five people. Both scenarios involve sacrificing one life for five, so if we simply wanted to maximize the greatest good for the greatest number of people, then seemingly we would treat both scenarios the same. Yet most people are much less willing to push an innocent bystander in front of a trolley than they are willing to divert a trolley into a person on a side track. Perhaps there is more to morality than simply counting how many people are positively and negatively affected by your actions.
The Trolley Problem will cause you to question your understanding of what "the right thing to do" is - even if it doesnt provide you with all of the answers, it will leave you asking the right questions.