You are a dentist and a teenage Hitler comes to you to have a bad tooth removed. You only have available an anaesthetic with this feature: Within eight hours of the start of anaesthesia, a neutralizer must be given, otherwise the patient dies. This is not a problem: the extraction will only taken an hour.
You remove the tooth, and are about to administer the neutralizer when you learn that if Hitler survives, he will kill tens of millions of people. And now it seems you have a question whether to save the life of a person who will kill millions if saved. You apply the Principle of Double Effect and check whether the conditions are satisfied:
Your end is good: Yup, saving the life of an innocent teenager.
The action is good or neutral in itself: Yes, administering a neutralizer.
The foreseen evils are not intended by you either as a means or as an end: Yes, you do not intend the deaths either as an end or as a means.
The foreseen evil is not disproportionate to the intended good: Ah, here is the rub. How can the deaths of tens of millions not be disproportionate to the saving of the life of one?
So it seems that the Principle of Double Effect forbids you to administer the neutralizer, and you must allow Hitler to die. In so doing, you will be violating your professional code of ethics, and you will no doubt have to resign from the dental profession. But at least you won’t have done something that would cover the world with blood.
This is still counterintuitive to me. It feels wrong for a medical professional to deliberately stop mid-procedure in this way.
One can try soften the worry by thinking of other cases. Suppose that the neutralizer bottle has been linked by a terrorist to a bomb a mile away, so that picking up the bottle will result in the death of dozens of people. In that case it is clearly wrong for the dentist to complete the operation. But the Hitler case still feels different, because it is the very survival of Hitler that one doesn’t want to happen. It is a bit more like a case where the terrorist informs you that if the patient survives the procedure, the terrorist will kill many innocents. I still think that in that case you shouldn’t finish the procedure. But it’s a tough case.
Suppose you are with me so far. Now, here is a twist. You learn of Hitler’s future murders prior to the start of the procedure. You are the only dentist around. Should you perform the procedure?
Here are four possible courses of action:
You do nothing. The teenage Hitler suffers toothache for many a day, and then later on kills tens of millions.
You perform the extraction without anaesthesia. The teenage Hitler suffers excruciating pain, and then later on kills tens of millions.
You perform the procedure, including both anaesthesia and neutralizer. The teenage Hitler’s pain is relieved, but then later on he kills tens of millions.
You administer the anaesthesia, remove the bad tooth, and stop there. The teenage Hitler dies, but the world is a far better place.
Assume for simplicity that it is the same tens of millions who die in cases 1, 2 and 3.
So, now, which course of action should you intend to embark on? Option 4, while consequentialistically best, is not acceptable given correct deontology (if you are a consequentialist, the rest won’t be very interesting to you). For if you intend to go for Option 4, you will do so in order to kill Hitler by administering the anaesthesia while planning not to administer the neutralizer. And that’s wrong, because he is a juridically innocent teenager.
Option 3 seems clearly morally superior to Options 1 and 2. After all, one innocent person—the teenage Hitler—is better off in Option 3, and nobody is worse off there.
But you cannot morally go through with Option 3. For as soon as you’ve applied the anaesthesia, the Double Effect reasoning we went through above would prohibit you from applying the neutralizer. So Option 3 is not available to you if you expect to continue to act morally, because if you continue to act morally, you will be unable to administer the neutralizer.
What should you do? If you had a time-delay neutralizer, that would be the morally upright solution. You give the time-delay neutralizer, administer anaesthesia, remove the bad tooth, and you’re done. Tens of millions still die, but at least this innocent teenager won’t be suffering. It seems a little paradoxical that Option 3 is morally impossible, but if you tweak the order of the procedures by using a time-delay, you get things right. But there really is a difference between the time-delay case and Option 3. In Option 3, your administering the neutralizer kills tens of millions. But administering the time-delay neutralizer prior to the procedure doesn’t counterfactual results in the deaths of tens of millions, because had you not administered the time-delay neutralizer, you wouldn’t then administer the anaesthesia (Option 2) or you wouldn’t then perform the procedure at all (Option 1), and so tens of millions would still die.
Here is another interesting option. Suppose you could get yourself hypnotized so that as soon as the tooth is removed, you just find yourself administering the neutralizer with no choice on your part. That, I think, would be just like the time-delay neutralizer, and thus it seems permissible. But on the other hand, it seems that it is wrong to get yourself hypnotized to involuntarily do something that it would be wrong to do voluntarily, and to administer to Hitler the neutralizer after the anaesthesia is something that it would be wrong to do voluntarily. Perhaps, though, it is always wrong to get yourself hypnotized with the intention of taking away your of choice (maybe that’s a failure of respect for oneself)? Or maybe it is sometimes permissible to hypnotize yourself to involuntarily do something that it would be wrong to voluntarily do. (Here is a case that seems acceptable. You hypnotize yourself to involuntarily say: “I am now speaking involuntarily.” It would be a lie to say that voluntarily!)
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ReplyDeleteIs it safe?
ReplyDeleteI deleted the previous posts on account this answer is classic... and fit so perfectly with the blog post...it is perfect, i.e. a case where word and deed match perfectly!
Dr Pruss
ReplyDeleteIsn't this is a non-question for you?
Your position concerning evil after all is:
2.Nothing that exists is evil.
7.Everything that exists is either God or created by God.
8.God is not evil.
9.Nothing created by God is evil.
10.So, nothing that exists is evil.
Therefore:
11. Your end is good: Yup, saving the life of an innocent teenager
You get the correct answer but for the wrong reasons...it's that idol thingy...
ReplyDeleteI'll show you where it goes wrong:
ReplyDelete2.Nothing that exists is evil. (FALSE)
7.Everything that exists is either God or created by God.(TRUE)
8.God is not evil.(TRUE)
9.Nothing created by God is evil.(FALSE)
10.So, nothing that exists is evil.(FALSE)
Therefore:
11. Your end is good(TRUE): Yup, saving the life of an innocent teenager(FALSE)
To make 11/ more precise for you:
ReplyDeleteTherefore:
11. Your end is good(TRUE): Yup, saving the life(TRUE) of an innocent teenager(FALSE)
Rather than looking to Aristotle and Aquinas for a solution to this problem... read Matthew chapters 5-7 (Sermon on the Mount)… the first half states the problem and the latter half states the consequences and solution. It also solves the trolley puzzle and also pinpoints and your reveals why you have climbing concerns.
ReplyDeleteThe Sermon on the Mount is called the Beatitudes the reason is it directly answers: Be-attitudes.
Proportionality is not the same as a mathematical proportion, I think.
ReplyDeleteSelf-defense allows you to do what it takes to stop an attack on you, for example. (It might also allow you to add something for its deterrent effect, etc.)
You do not have to allow an attack on your child by 1,000 enemies just because the only way to stop them is to kill all of them.
And the dentist could just do her job, and leave saving the world to others, if she so chose. Proportionality would not make such a choice immoral. What was proportional would depend upon such choices.
The Sanhedrin applied the Principle of Double Effect to condemn Christ.
ReplyDeleteThe Sanhedrin was just doing its job, leaving saving the world to another Messiah, if God so chose.
Well, I do think that a dentist does not have to become a saint, least of all Joan of Arc.
ReplyDeleteAnd my main point was about how proportionality is nothing to do with mathematical proportion. Indeed, suppose that ten million slaves were ordered to try, one by one, to maim your daughter, say by cutting all her limbs off, in such a way that she was not actually killed. And suppose that the only way to stop them was to kill them, one by one.
Proportionality means that you could do that, but you could not also maim someone that you did not like. Ten million dead people who did not want to, but would try to, maim your daughter, good enough; ten million dead plus one maimed person who you hate, bad.
… my main point was about how proportionality is nothing to do with mathematical proportion
ReplyDeleteWithout counting we can ascertain whether two collections are equal and, if not equal, which is greater.
In your point concerning the ten million slaves maiming a daughter we have a one-to-one correspondence, the person hated is in a different collection.
So, the father kills until the collection of slaves maiming his daughter is exhausted.
Dr Pruss missed a trick by not stipulating that the dentist was in fact a Jewish father with 5 daughters living in Linz...
ReplyDeleteI doubt, even if the Jewish dentist had decided not use the neutraliser; somehow, one way or another events would have enfolded ensuring Hitler received the neutraliser.... a case of back-ward causation... for if the dentist did succeed in killing Hitler... Israel would not have been created in 1948.
ReplyDeleteMartin:
ReplyDeleteEither the slaves are acting freely or unfreely. If they are acting unfreely, say due to brainwashing, then I think it is problematic to defend the innocent in lethal ways against such a vast number, even if one does not intend to kill. If they are acting freely, however, then the death of ten million _malefactors_ might be proportionate.
Dr Pruss
ReplyDeleteThey are "slaves" how can they act "freely"?
I wonder if the dentist, when administering the neutralizer in the initial scenario, is simply saving a life, rather than fulfilling an implicit promise, made when administering the anaesthetic.
ReplyDeleteMartin Cooke
ReplyDeleteAccording from what Dr Pruss has written on his blog, it is never permissible to lie. So, you are correct; if the dentist told Hitler he would give him the neutraliser, then according to Dr Pruss he must.
It would then appear that saving a life is secondary to the moral imperative thou shalt never lie according to Dr Pruss. So, you are correct again.
ReplyDeleteTechnically, breaking a promise is different from lying. I am inclined to think that it is always wrong to make an insincere promise -- a promise one isn't intending to fulfill. But once one has made a promise, the binding force of the promise is limited. For instance, you might find out that the thing you agreed to do is immoral. E.g., you are a pilot and you promised to bomb an installation, but then you find out that the installation is an elementary school.
ReplyDeleteAnd a promise to do something you know from the outset to be immoral is null and void from the outset. If I promise to give Hitler the neutralizer while knowing that it will be immoral to do so, my promise is null and void.
Dr Pruss
ReplyDeleteYour answer is so funny:
Alex Pruss: Technically, breaking a promise is different from lying.
Jesus Christ: But let your communication be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: for whatsoever is more than these cometh of evil. (Matthew 5:37)
And you are wrong again.... you state:
And a promise to do something you know from the outset to be immoral is null and void the outset. If I promise to give Hitler the neutralizer while knowing that it will be immoral to do so, my promise is null and void.
Problem is Dr Pruss… the dentist made the promise to a conscious innocent teenager BEFORE he anesthetised him... only later does the dentist learn of the future, i.e. Principle of Complete Knowledge.
The not interesting thing is that you are wrong... but, what is interesting is that you consistently miss the interesting aspect of philosophical questions.
You were fortunate to have a clever son.
In your original scenario, Alex, the rub was:
ReplyDeleteHow can the deaths of tens of millions not be disproportionate to the saving of the life of one?
The anaesthetic was administered because I, the dentist, knew that I could administer the neutralizer. Had I thought about it, there would have been a promise to administer the neutralizer. Consequently choosing not to administer the neutralizer would be a lot like choosing to murder the young Adolf. If it would be wrong to murder Adolf on the grounds of all of those tens of millions of his future victims, then it would be wrong not to administer the neutralizer.
Incidentally, I wonder if it really would be wrong for (option 4) the dentist to simply kill the juridically innocent teenage Adolf. One could identify with the ten million victims, essentially joining the war effort. Then it would be a bit like seeing a young soldier about to throw a bomb. Although our young Adolf is not a soldier, he is the person who definitely will choose to start the war, and so my intuition is that it would be no less acceptable to kill him than to kill the young soldier.
ReplyDeleteThe young soldier fighting on the side of injustice in a war is doing something wrong. The young Adolf is not. It seems to be murder to kill him.
ReplyDeleteThe young soldier could well be an innocent, simply believing what he has been taught, by those around him as he grew up. It is not his fault that his side is unjust. And he has not even killed anyone yet. He is only about to throw something that will. The main reason why it is allowed to kill him is that there is a war on and he is on the wrong side and he is about to throw it. And the young Adolf is doing something that will lead to it being his fault that there is a war on at all. I think that the fact that Adolf starts the unjust war means that we do not have to wait for the war to start before we consider him to be a legitimate target. It seems to be murder to kill him only, I think, if we ignore how he causes the war that legitimizes so many other targets. Similarly, killing the soldier would seem like murder were we to ignore what would happen were he to throw the thing he holds, and the wider context in which it would be taking place.
ReplyDelete