In 1842, a ship struck an iceberg and more than 30 survivors were crowded into a lifeboat which was made for only 7. As a storm threatened, it became clear that the lifeboat would have to be made less heavy if they wanted to survive. The captain said that the right thing to do in this situation was to make some people jump out of the boat and drown. Such an action, he thought, was not unjust to those thrown overboard, because they would have drowned anyway. If he did nothing, however, he would be responsible for the deaths of those whom he could have saved. Some people opposed the captain's decision. They claimed that if nothing were done and everyone died as a result, no one would be responsible for these deaths. On the other hand, if the captain attempted to save some, he could do this only by killing others and their deaths would be his responsibility; this would
be worse than doing nothing and letting all die. The captain rejected this idea. Because the only possibility for rescue required great efforts of rowing, the captain decided that the weakest would have to be sacrificed. In this situation it would be absurd, he thought, to decide by throwing a dice who should be thrown overboard. As it turned out, after days of hard rowing, the survivors were rescued and the captain was tried for his action. If you had been on the jury, how would you have decided?
ponedeljek, 26. maj 2008
A moral dilemma
There is a moral dilemma below. Read it carefully and think about it for a while. After that write your opinion - did the boat's captain do the right thing and why.
sobota, 24. maj 2008
My first lines...
These are my first lines of BLOG. I've already set up some web pages (e. g. OŠ JURIJA VEGE), but no blog so far.
I hope it will be interesting for me, for my colleagues, for my pupils and other visitors.
I hope it will be interesting for me, for my colleagues, for my pupils and other visitors.
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