Choice
#1
Posted 20 December 2010 - 14:53
When faced with a man (or men) holding a loaded gun at your head and giving you an instruction, do you really have a choice in what you do? Do you think that there are any reasonable people out there that would not follow that instruction? Is the preservation of ones life really a choice or is it an instinct?
#2
Posted 20 December 2010 - 15:05
Edited by SquigPie, 20 December 2010 - 15:06.
Quote
Imagine a group of people who are all blind, deaf and slightly demented and suddenly someone in the crowd asks, "What are we to do?"... The only possible answer is, "Look for a cure". Until you are cured, there is nothing you can do.
And since you don't believe you are sick, there can be no cure.
- Vladimir Solovyov
#3
Posted 20 December 2010 - 15:08
SquigPie, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:05, said:
Wizard, on 20 Dec 2010, 14:53, said:
This isn't about unique or special people, just what can be descirbed as an ordinary person (specifically by a court of law, but that is irrelevant).
#4
Posted 20 December 2010 - 15:44
Second, what you probably did mean: it depends on what you are asked to do. Being asked to pick up a can of beer at gunpoint and that's it - yeah, I'd bet that any reasonable person would comply. Being asked to do something that strongly violates the person's own code of moral is quite likely to be refused, provided it's a relevant issue and the person is sincere in his/her motives.
Still, even when the outcome of a choice is foregone that doesn't mean that there was no choice to begin with. You can choose the same action a thousand times and still it's a choice every time. Otherwise, you'd be using a different definition of choice which makes the question of the existence of choice void.
On a sidenote, I doubt that being a reasonable person is of much relevance to the issue. Very few people stay reasonable under extreme conditions.
#5
Posted 20 December 2010 - 15:53
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
#7
Posted 20 December 2010 - 16:23
Wizard, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:53, said:
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
Wizard, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:53, said:
Golan, on 20 Dec 2010, 15:44, said:
Even if every single person would take the same option, it doesn't logically follow that there wasn't a choice. The choice is made by picking an outcome - it is irrelevant which one. If you were to say that by every person making the same choice, there wouldn't be a choice to begin with, then the entire concept of choice is void: every single possible choice can be defined precisely enough to include only a single occurrence of a choice being made. As a single choice has only a single result, the choice would have had the same result every time it was made (exactly once). Thus, if you say that a number of similar "choices" do not count as "real" choices if the outcome is always the same, then no choice at all counts as a "real" one.
What you are constructing here is merely an extreme case in which the choice appears to be foregone as the logical decision behind it is relatively clear. It is however not imperative that a certain choice is taken, as history has shown (there are enough cases of fathers, mothers, soldiers and accountants taking a fatal outcome for themselves to save others or not to compromise their ideals).
Edited by Golan, 20 December 2010 - 16:38.
#8
Posted 27 December 2010 - 11:36
Wizard, on 20 Dec 2010, 22:53, said:
i wouldn't think reasonable is the right word for that. A person with the right frame of mind is more suiting. Some had a gun pointed at me i wouldn't follow said instructions and giving the right circumstance id make a grab for the gun, if it goes off well its not like you will feel it you'd be dead
Plus you got to consider the willingness of the gunman to actually use it.
I question the general assumption that i am inherently deficient in the area of grammar and sentence structure
#9
Posted 08 January 2011 - 22:11
To answer the question if there are any reasonable people who would not follow the instruction to do whatever when a gun is pointed at their head: Obviously there are people "out there somewhere" who would stick to their own morals for principality's sake, but once again, the situation itself factors into the decision to either follow instructions or to do nothing.
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