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

2,103,290 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.
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On your way to the New Lindley spaceport, you receive a distress call.
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There’s been an explosion on the Telic 12
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and its passengers are running out of oxygen.
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As you set a course to intercept, you check the Telic 12′s manifest.
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It’s currently transporting 30 middle-aged individuals
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from some of Earth’s poorest districts to the labor center on New Lindley,
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where they'll be assigned jobs on the spaceport.
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But as you approach the Telic 12, you receive a second distress call.
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A luxury space cruiser called the Pareto has lost a thruster,
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sending them careening towards an asteroid belt.
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Without your help, the 20 college students headed for vacation
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aboard the Pareto are all doomed.
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So with only enough time to save one ship, which one should you choose?
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This dilemma is an example of a broader class of problems
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where a life-saving resource— such as a donated organ or vaccine—
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is scarce.
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There are many schools of thought on how to approach these problems,
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and one of the most influential is utilitarianism,
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an ethical view first systematically developed
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by Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill.
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In this view, you should choose the action
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which promises the greatest sum of happiness.
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Though, how to define and measure happiness is a difficult question.
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For example, hedonists would suggest a happy life
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contains the most pleasure and the least pain.
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Others might say it’s the life where your desires are most fulfilled.
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However happiness is defined,
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most would agree that saving 30 lives has the potential
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to generate more happiness than saving 20.
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But is it enough to consider how many lives would be saved?
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Or should you also consider how many life years would be?
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Assuming a life expectancy of 80, saving the lives of the students,
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with an average age of 20, saves 1,200 life years,
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while saving the workers, with an average age of 45, saves 1,050.
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All things being equal, a longer life should promise
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a greater sum of happiness than a shorter one.
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So perhaps saving the smaller ship actually has the potential
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to generate the most happiness.
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If all these calculations feel a bit cold,
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you may want to consider a different approach.
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The philosopher Derek Parfit argues we should give priority to the worse off,
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since benefits to those groups matter more
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than equivalent benefits to the well-off.
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In this view, it’s more urgent to help those whose basic needs aren’t met
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even if they’re harder to help than those who are flourishing.
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But often, determining which group is truly worse off can get complicated fast.
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In our case, Earth is still beset by drastic inequalities
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in wealth and opportunity.
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And those able to afford a vacation on New Lindley
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and transport on a luxury cruiser
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are no doubt among the most well-off people on the planet.
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The workers, by contrast, are among the most disadvantaged,
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traveling away from home for months at a time to perform service work.
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With fewer resources and opportunities,
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it’s likely they’ve experienced more hardship in their lives
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than the vacationers,
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so maybe they’re more deserving of rescue?
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On the other hand, the students have experienced less life overall—
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so perhaps they’re worse off?
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Or maybe none of these variables should influence our decision.
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The philosopher John Taurek famously argued that in these types of cases,
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the numbers don’t count.
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Each person is deserving of equal concern and respect,
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so the best way to decide which passengers to save is to flip a coin.
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While this might seem arbitrary at first, this approach treats all parties equally,
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giving each individual an equal chance of being rescued.
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Could any passenger argue that they're being treated unfairly by a coin flip?
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It’s tough to say.
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But how they— and you— feel about the result may be another dilemma altogether.
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