You can only save one— who do you choose? - Doug MacKay

2,286,001 views ・ 2021-12-21

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
You are the captain of the Mallory 7, an interstellar cargo transport.
0
6788
4666
00:11
On your way to the New Lindley spaceport, you receive a distress call.
1
11746
4083
00:16
There’s been an explosion on the Telic 12
2
16246
2792
00:19
and its passengers are running out of oxygen.
3
19038
2291
00:21
As you set a course to intercept, you check the Telic 12′s manifest.
4
21954
3875
00:26
It’s currently transporting 30 middle-aged individuals
5
26079
3250
00:29
from some of Earth’s poorest districts to the labor center on New Lindley,
6
29329
4375
00:33
where they'll be assigned jobs on the spaceport.
7
33871
2333
00:36
But as you approach the Telic 12, you receive a second distress call.
8
36621
3833
00:40
A luxury space cruiser called the Pareto has lost a thruster,
9
40746
4000
00:44
sending them careening towards an asteroid belt.
10
44746
2750
00:47
Without your help, the 20 college students headed for vacation
11
47704
3833
00:51
aboard the Pareto are all doomed.
12
51537
2375
00:54
So with only enough time to save one ship, which one should you choose?
13
54662
4834
00:59
This dilemma is an example of a broader class of problems
14
59996
3708
01:03
where a life-saving resource— such as a donated organ or vaccine—
15
63704
4292
01:07
is scarce.
16
67996
1000
01:09
There are many schools of thought on how to approach these problems,
17
69079
3250
01:12
and one of the most influential is utilitarianism,
18
72329
3042
01:15
an ethical view first systematically developed
19
75579
2834
01:18
by Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill.
20
78413
2833
01:21
In this view, you should choose the action
21
81579
2125
01:23
which promises the greatest sum of happiness.
22
83704
2209
01:26
Though, how to define and measure happiness is a difficult question.
23
86246
3458
01:30
For example, hedonists would suggest a happy life
24
90163
3375
01:33
contains the most pleasure and the least pain.
25
93538
2666
01:36
Others might say it’s the life where your desires are most fulfilled.
26
96538
3833
01:40
However happiness is defined,
27
100538
1916
01:42
most would agree that saving 30 lives has the potential
28
102454
3709
01:46
to generate more happiness than saving 20.
29
106163
2833
01:49
But is it enough to consider how many lives would be saved?
30
109454
3334
01:52
Or should you also consider how many life years would be?
31
112996
3708
01:57
Assuming a life expectancy of 80, saving the lives of the students,
32
117079
4292
02:01
with an average age of 20, saves 1,200 life years,
33
121371
4375
02:05
while saving the workers, with an average age of 45, saves 1,050.
34
125746
5292
02:11
All things being equal, a longer life should promise
35
131746
3000
02:14
a greater sum of happiness than a shorter one.
36
134746
2875
02:18
So perhaps saving the smaller ship actually has the potential
37
138329
3542
02:21
to generate the most happiness.
38
141871
1958
02:24
If all these calculations feel a bit cold,
39
144329
2334
02:26
you may want to consider a different approach.
40
146663
2208
02:29
The philosopher Derek Parfit argues we should give priority to the worse off,
41
149038
4875
02:33
since benefits to those groups matter more
42
153913
2583
02:36
than equivalent benefits to the well-off.
43
156496
2458
02:39
In this view, it’s more urgent to help those whose basic needs aren’t met
44
159496
4333
02:43
even if they’re harder to help than those who are flourishing.
45
163829
3250
02:47
But often, determining which group is truly worse off can get complicated fast.
46
167288
4833
02:52
In our case, Earth is still beset by drastic inequalities
47
172329
3792
02:56
in wealth and opportunity.
48
176121
1583
02:58
And those able to afford a vacation on New Lindley
49
178204
3167
03:01
and transport on a luxury cruiser
50
181371
2333
03:03
are no doubt among the most well-off people on the planet.
51
183704
3542
03:07
The workers, by contrast, are among the most disadvantaged,
52
187788
3333
03:11
traveling away from home for months at a time to perform service work.
53
191121
3833
03:15
With fewer resources and opportunities,
54
195329
2375
03:17
it’s likely they’ve experienced more hardship in their lives
55
197704
2834
03:20
than the vacationers,
56
200538
1000
03:21
so maybe they’re more deserving of rescue?
57
201538
2000
03:23
On the other hand, the students have experienced less life overall—
58
203913
3958
03:27
so perhaps they’re worse off?
59
207871
1708
03:29
Or maybe none of these variables should influence our decision.
60
209954
3292
03:33
The philosopher John Taurek famously argued that in these types of cases,
61
213538
4416
03:37
the numbers don’t count.
62
217954
1500
03:40
Each person is deserving of equal concern and respect,
63
220454
3542
03:43
so the best way to decide which passengers to save is to flip a coin.
64
223996
4000
03:48
While this might seem arbitrary at first, this approach treats all parties equally,
65
228454
4875
03:53
giving each individual an equal chance of being rescued.
66
233329
3500
03:57
Could any passenger argue that they're being treated unfairly by a coin flip?
67
237496
4792
04:02
It’s tough to say.
68
242954
1250
04:04
But how they— and you— feel about the result may be another dilemma altogether.
69
244329
5209
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7