LIFEBOAT PROBLEM

LIFEBOAT PROBLEM

2-2 Short Paper: Lifeboat Problem Assignment

Thinking back on the Virtual Philosopher, look again at the lifeboat problem:

You are on a lifeboat with 11 people (including yourself) aboard. The water surrounding the lifeboat is freezing and no one can survive it. There is no rescue ship in sight and, worse yet, the lifeboat is sinking. You notice that there is a sign posted on the lifeboat that says, “Capacity of this boat is 10 normal-sized people.” Looking around the boat, there are 10 normal-sized people and one 400-pound man. No one wants to jump out of the boat and if nothing is done it will sink, leaving 11 people to die.

You can:

  1. Push the 400-pound man out of the boat to save everyone else (achieving the greater good)

OR

  1. Refuse to push the 400-pound man out of the boat and hope for a miracle.

Short paper assignments must include a cover page and reference page, double spacing, 12‐point Times New Roman font, one‐inch margins, and discipline‐appropriate citations. Short papers should be two to three pages in length (not including cover page and reference page).

Answer preview
The lifeboat problem presents a scenario where an individual is required to make a decision and salvage a bad situation. The decision chosen should be aimed at presenting the “right” solution and at the same time dealing with the situation at hand. In all these, the decision chosen should be backed by valid principles, and in essence, choosing one option over the other does not make one right and the other wrong. It is obvious that…
(600 words)
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