An Escalating Situation
Brad 26 Mar 2010
Basically, the aim of the game is to give your opinion (or what you would do) in the situation presented. At first, it will start simple, and then once a few people have given their opinions, I escalate (like in the title ) the situation, to see if your opinion is the same. The first one I do will be pretty simple, and as the entire topic progresses I will escalate. I've done this to see how easy, or difficult, it would be to break a person's viewpoint, while also seeing how many people are on complete ends of a certain spectrum. Sound interesting? If yes, play along!
Example
The situation: "It is always right to tell the truth."
Some might respond no, some might respond yes.
After escalating: "You and your friend have been kidnapped, and the criminals want you to tell them where the police are for them. Do you tell them the truth?"
So, most people would still respond no.
After that, if it is easy enough and many people have the same viewpoint, I would escalate again.
The First Situation
"You should always return an item you have borrowed."
"An old man lent you his firearm so you may hunt some pests eating your crops. You have finished dealing with the problem, and its time to give the old man his firearms back; however, in the time it took you, the old man has become aggressive and has even attacked one or two of the villagers. Do you give him his firearms back?"
Edited by Brad, 06 April 2010 - 14:00.
Example
The situation: "It is always right to tell the truth."
Some might respond no, some might respond yes.
After escalating: "You and your friend have been kidnapped, and the criminals want you to tell them where the police are for them. Do you tell them the truth?"
So, most people would still respond no.
After that, if it is easy enough and many people have the same viewpoint, I would escalate again.
The First Situation
"You should always return an item you have borrowed."
"An old man lent you his firearm so you may hunt some pests eating your crops. You have finished dealing with the problem, and its time to give the old man his firearms back; however, in the time it took you, the old man has become aggressive and has even attacked one or two of the villagers. Do you give him his firearms back?"
Edited by Brad, 06 April 2010 - 14:00.
Warbz 29 Mar 2010
Yes, but I assume you are going to give an examplet hat they are going to something bad with it, so obviously a lot of viewpoints will change.
Mr.Choppy 03 Apr 2010
There is always an exception.
But seeing that you have "borrowed" it, you should return it.
Edited by Mr.Choppy, 03 April 2010 - 23:12.
But seeing that you have "borrowed" it, you should return it.
Edited by Mr.Choppy, 03 April 2010 - 23:12.
Brad 06 Apr 2010
I don't think anyone else will post here, so I might as-well do the next step.
"An old man lent you his firearm so you may hunt some pests eating your crops. You have finished dealing with the problem, and its time to give the old man his firearms back; however, in the time it took you, the old man has become aggressive and has even attacked one or two of the villagers. Do you give him his firearms back?"
(Also added to the first post).
It would be nice if you could elaborate, rather than simply say yes or no.
"An old man lent you his firearm so you may hunt some pests eating your crops. You have finished dealing with the problem, and its time to give the old man his firearms back; however, in the time it took you, the old man has become aggressive and has even attacked one or two of the villagers. Do you give him his firearms back?"
(Also added to the first post).
It would be nice if you could elaborate, rather than simply say yes or no.