Logically killing more lives is morally worse IE more chance of kids without a parent, parents losing partners, people losing loved ones which can cause more harm and misery. But killing multiple times is always morally worse because it is multiplying that moral wrong. If the group of six got together and took precautions in case a trolley situation happened they would come to the same conclusion.
Always with the making excuses. You just can't see that it's subjective.
The problem with your scenario is you keep changing it assuming that the trolley driver knows the details of the ages and circumstances of the people involved. 90-year-olds don't work so that is unreal. But generally, the taking of 1 life is better than 5 as explained above and age should not change that.
I'm showing you how what is morally right changes because it's subjective. And again you are just trying to make excuses as to why it's invalid.
That's the Euthyphro dilemma. But this is a false dilemma as there is another alternative. God wills something because God's nature is good. He is the essence of good, the logos, or what Plato calls "the Good". By nature, God is just, loving, kind, compassionate, all the moral values. As God is naturally good his commandments (our moral duties) are reflected in God's nature and therefore are not grounded in anything external to God and God is not arbitrarily determining or commanding those morals to us.
Euthyphro dilemma - Wikipedia
Actually, what you said falls into the second condition.
Now, what would you do if God commanded you to kill someone?
Yes, that is called absolute morality where the act of killing is always wrong no matter what the situation. Objective morality only means that in every given situation there is an objectively right or wrong thing to do outside of human opinion.
And yet that is precisely what you did when you took a
deliberate act to change the tracks to kill the one person.
Congratulations, you just violated your objective morality and claimed it was the moral thing to do.
I'm not saying that. I am saying you have to find out the cause that leads to harm or killing as it may not be the driver who is at fault. Say you are driving and someone had cut your brake line and you ran down someone because your brakes didn't work. Is the driver culpable or the person who cut the brakes. In the case of the train incident, the inquiry found that poor work practices in rehooking the carriages were the cause of the incident. That put the controller of the tracks in the trolley situation in the first place where he was forced to make that hard decision.
You have to take that into consideration. It isn't as though someone just decided to send a carriage into a house for the fun of it. That's why they have the inquiry to find out who contributed to the situation and was at fault.
Sounds like you're treating it as subjective.
Both the automated cars and the real-life situation are different from the "trolley thought experiment". The real-life situation allows all the attempts to avoid the incident and takes all the circumstances into consideration like poor work standards etc. It was the poor work standards that caused the runaway carriages. It allows human agency, humans to be humans and try everything to change the situation and it is in the trying that lives can be saved and harm avoided and shows that they care.
The same with the automated car in that contributing facts are taken into consideration. Like there are automated brakes that make a difference, the pedestrian contribution in jumping out in front of the car thus reducing culpability of the driver. And if the car is automated then how is the driver responsible for any killing anyway.
But the "trolley thought experiment" doesn't consider any of this. It puts a person in an unreal situation where no real-life contributing factors can be taken into consideration. It says the person has to sit there and drive the trolley into someone like a cardboard cutout. They can't yell to warn people or and mitigating circumstances like using brakes to slow down cannot be used. Anyone would hit the brakes.
But no there are no brakes on this make-believe trolley. If there are no brakes who is responsible for the brakes not working etc. That is why it is criticized as not only an unreal situation but a psychologically damaging situation to put a person into for trying to teach about ethical dilemmas.
Excuses excuses.
The criticism isn't about the end choice. It is about the "thought experiment" itself in putting a person in that unreal situation by taking away human agency for all the other choices and actions any normal human would take before it got to that point.
I gave you a real world issue where this applies and gave you a real world example of when it happened. Don't tell me that it's an unreal situation.
Yes there is subjective morality (that's personal opinion) and then there is objective morality (independent of people's views). So in any given moral situation, a person can take a subjective or objective moral position. But they cannot take both at the same time.
That's like saying there's objective and subjective mathematics. Doesn't work that way.
Yes but that will be according to God's laws and some situations may take more consideration than others to determine God's laws. But there will always be a determination.
Luckily everyone is in agreement about God's moral instructions, since they came from God.
Oh, wait...
As we are talking about morality in various situations then for people there will be a subjective or an objective moral position to take. Thus both subjective and objective morality will exist. But despite there being subjective morality from a secular worldview I am saying there are also objective moral values that will always apply to those situations. But people have a choice.
And in trying to defend your objective morality position, you are forced to ever more complicated ideas to explain things. It's not helping your position.
Yes I agree and it doesn't disprove it either. That's why showing that even one situation can be morally objective is important in supporting whether there are objective moral values. It is like me saying there is such a thing as anger. I only have to show one person being angry to support that there is anger. The same with objective moral values.
Remember, you haven't yet shown objective morality yet. You've just claimed you have, but all of your attempts to actually do so boil down to claiming that there must be objective morality because people act like their morality is objective.
From a human perspective, any given situation can have someone taking a subjective moral position and another taking an objective moral position. It is another story whether both can be true at the same time. I am not rejecting subjective morals positions but only saying objective morals are the moral value for any given situation.
And there are plenty of situations where you can not show any objective morality at all.
Is smacking an acceptable punishment for a child in any situation?
I am not sure what you mean.
You said morals need morals.
It's like the world turtle on the back of the elephant. The elephant needs an elephant to stand on. But since elephants need to stand on an elephant themselves, the second elephant needs to stand on a third elephant, which needs a fourth, and so on. It's turtles all the way down!
Of course, it does.
Morals need to belong to a system just like laws do. If you prove one law exists then you automatically prove a system of law exists. A law in isolation means nothing just like a moral in isolation means nothing. Say I prove that abusing a child is objectively wrong. What is the moral that applies to this situation, kindness, love, respect, dignity, justice? They all apply.
Not abusing a child is about treating human life as precious which is associated with many morals. That is why Christ said that all the law can be summed up in loving your neighbour as you love yourself. That is why the golden rule is held up as a coverall for many morals. Morals don't operate in isolation they are part of a bigger system. You cannot disconnect a moral with other morals.
Again you make claims and you fail to support those claims. WHY do morals need to belong to a system?
All you have are a series of assumptions and now you are being put into a position where you must justify those assumptions, and you are finding you can't.
Of course, they are objective. Everyone knows that it is always morally right to tenderly love and hold a child than sexually abuse them.
Such fine logical skills here. Of course I'm right, everyone knows it! That's a very subjective opinion you have there.
You keep throwing more and more moral situations at me. I only have to prove once that objective morality exists. As I know this game it will never end.
You still haven't done it! All you've done is claim that there must be objective morals because people act like there are. Yet you still fail to realise that people can act like their morals are objective even if they are subjective.
Yes that's right. But that only proves individual situations. If I say that love exists I only have to show one situation that demonstrates love to support that claim.
And how would you show that this hypothetical demonstration wasn't just an act?