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本頁翻譯進度

燈號說明

審定:無
翻譯:黃秀惠(簡介並寄信)
編輯:徐雅各(簡介並寄信)

底下的作業包含讀後上台報告和一篇學期論文。對道德觀方面的思考試驗及其問題的例子是這門課程的一些獨特觀點。

報告和論文

1. 上台報告的主題須基於所列之讀物或經由課堂講師許可的題目。
2.論文為經課堂講師許可的題目,於期末前繳交。


參與者必須在兩堂關於幻想兩難的課中做出決定。

1. 電車難題。 例子︰ Example:

一列電車正沿著軌道急駛。在電車前面的軌道上有五名無辜者,如果電車繼續直駛,他們將被輾斃。軌道上有另一條支線通往其他方向。有一名無辜者在那條支線上。電車的剎車已經失靈,但有一個轉轍器能被啟動,使電車駛往支線上。你是一名無辜的旁觀者。你可以按下轉轍器救那五名無辜者,但那將導致那名在支線上的無辜者遭輾斃。你會怎麼做?

2. 救生艇難題。 例子︰

一艘船已經沉了,在一只救生艇上有六個生還者。因為大小的限制,救生艇只能支撐五個生還者,且你必須做出決定。這六個生還者中,有五個是一般的成人,第六個是一隻牧羊犬。其中一個勢必被丟棄而遭溺斃。你會怎麼做?

a. 丟棄狗

b. 在五個人中抽籤並丟棄抽中者

c. 六個生還者公平抽籤並丟棄抽中者

參與者被給於這兩道難題的不同樣式,亦即對不同的觀點作變化。建構出的這些難題可讓不同觀點在重要性上可被互相比較。不同的觀點包括 (全部例子都是有關於電車的難題)︰

1. 行動-不行動:所有設計的難題允許參與者去做(啟動轉轍器)或不做(讓電車繼續行駛) ,以了解這觀點本身是否重要。

2. 數目:軌道上個體數目的改變。例子一︰五個人對一個人。例子二︰五個人對你的兄弟。

3. 社會契約:改變個體的涉入情境。例子︰軌道上無辜的旁觀者對在修理鐵軌的鐵路員工。

4. 納粹分子:包含檢視一種引人憎惡哲學觀點的影響。例子︰納粹分子在一條軌道上而無辜者在另一端。

5. 總親緣適應度:參與者和鐵軌上的人之間的親緣程度。包括生物上的親屬以及朋友和相同社群的成員。

6. 精英:擁有高社會地位的人。例子︰無辜的旁觀者在一條鐵軌上,另一條鐵軌上則是正著手發明一種治療癌症藥的著名科學家。

7. 物種:例子︰一個人類在一軌道上,五隻大猩猩在另一軌道上。

8. 瀕臨絕種的: 相配的物種觀點,比較瀕危物種與沒有瀕危物種與人類。

結果︰

  • 透過上述兩個不同的研究,比較四種不同的參與族群︰三組不同的美國心理學學生和一組台灣學生。
  • 就墮胎、節育、死刑、醫學實驗、宗教加入等的個人信仰而言,發現族群間有許多差異。
  • 然而,在操控的幻想兩難問題上的道德觀點,不同的群體僅有很細微的差異。不考慮取樣的話,個人可能會有極相似的決定。換句話說,個人偏愛自己物種的成員勝過其他物種;家庭(以及朋友)勝過陌生人;任某人死亡比殺死他在道德上是更能被接受的;寧可選擇拯救更多而不是更少的人;利用社會契約的訊息於他們的決定;並且譴責那些是納粹分子的人。精英主義和瀕危物種對決定則沒有影響。
  • 不同觀點的重要性順序是︰物種、總親緣適應度、行動-不行動、數目、社會契約、精英主義(納粹分子和瀕危物種不包含在台灣人族群的取樣裡)。除精英主義之外,所有這些觀點在決定兩難的結果方面有著重要性。

結論︰

  • 在衡量個人信仰所發現的差異與幻想兩難的回應上並不相關,此意味著道德直覺的本質比個人信仰存在於更深,更基本的層面。這些研究作者推斷在這些幻想兩難的回應模式的普遍性上顯示至少有部分的生物成分逐步演化成人類的道德。

Petrinovich, Lewis (1995),《人類的進化、生殖和道德》(Human evolution, reproduction, and morality)/em>,紐約︰Plenum出版社。

Petrinovich, L.O Neill,P. 和Jorgensen, M.(1993),〈道德直覺的經驗研究︰進行中的和演化的倫理學〉(An empirical study of moral intuitions: Toward and evolutionary ethics),《人格和社會心理學期刊》,64 ,467 - 478。



問題討論

1. 什麼是幻想兩難方法學的限制?一些討論的可能性包括︰
  • 有限的參與者樣本(甚至用交叉文化的數據,全部都是學生)
  • 紙和筆,問卷方法學(回應偏見)?
  • 我們能從這些回應概括多少真實行為(而多少是要緊的)?

2. 就生物學和演化所提出的問題而論,這樣數據有多少說服力?一個社會文化的解釋能說明這些結果嗎?

3. 在道德直覺研究所提出的普遍性上,我們能表現出多少現實世界的道德觀? 在個人信仰問題上的不同回應是否意味著現實世界的道德判斷可能比這些提出的普遍性所暗示更多的變化?

4. 有其他的證據能促進闡明生物學和道德之間的環節嗎?



道德的現代研究方法

道德直覺和幻想兩難
  • 對人類道德的現代演化研究方法背後的基本概念是我們的道德信仰和直覺至少在某些方面有生物學上的基礎。換句話說,演化生物學的原理(例如總親緣適應度的概念)能夠把許多我們視為道德的行為傾向解釋清楚。
  • 在道德直覺的研究上已經闡釋了幾個道德議題,包括︰

1. 數目 -一個受決定所影響的個體數量應該能左右建議行為的本質嗎?(亦即,你有權利選擇拯救一個人或五個人的生命

2. 行動和省略 -任某人死亡比殺死他是更被允許的?

3. 社會契約 -一些社會契約能影響一個行為判斷的道德觀,例如︰

a. 是否一個先前的允諾幫助一個人而不是另一個人。

b.人權和所有權

c. 社會成本和利益

d.生物學上的關聯-是否我們對家族或者同種族的成員負有一種道義責任?

  • 一種探索基於生物學道德觀的方法乃是透過幻想兩難的運用,並針對評估人類關於道德判斷的直覺作假設情境。例如︰

你有使用一種救命藥的機會。有一個人,如果他不服下整份的藥,他將會死。而另有五個人,每人只需服下五分之一的藥便能存活。你會選擇把藥給:那個人或那五個人?







The assignments below range from presentations on readings to a term paper. Examples of some unique aspects of this class are the thought experiments on morality, and the thought questions.

Presentation and Paper

1. Presentation of lecture topic based on the readings or a topic approved by the instructor.
2. Paper on a topic approved by the instructors, due end of semester.


Participants had to make decisions on two different classes of fantasy dilemmas.

1. Trolley problems. Example:

A trolley is hurtling down the tracks. There are five innocent people on the track ahead of the trolley and they will be killed if the trolley continues going straight ahead. There is a spur of track leading off to the side. There is one innocent person on that track. The brakes of the trolley have failed and there is a switch which can be activated to cause the trolley to go to the side track. You are an innocent bystander. You can throw the switch saving the five innocent people, which will result in the death of the one innocent person on the side track. What do you do?

2. Lifeboat problems. Example:

A ship has sunk and there are six survivors on a lifeboat. Because of limits of size, the lifeboat can only support five individuals and you must decide what to do. Five of the six are normal adult human beings and the sixth is a collie dog. One individual must be thrown over to drown. What would you do?

a. Throw the dog over

b. Draw lots among the humans and throw the losing human over

c. Draw equal lots and throw the loser among all six over

Participants were presented with different varieties of these two dilemmas, varying on a number of dimensions. The dilemmas were constructed to allow the dimensions to be compared in importance with one another. The dimensions were (all examples are in reference to the trolley problem):

1. Action-Inaction: All the dilemmas were constructed to allow the participant to act (throw the switch) or avoid acting (let the trolley continue on its path) to see if this dimension was important in and of itself.

2. Numbers: The number of individuals on the tracks were varied. Example One: Five people versus one person. Example Two: Five people versus your brother.

3. Social contract: Varied the individuals』 involvement in the situation. Example: Innocent bystanders on the track versus railroad employees working to repair the track.

4. Nazi: Included as a dimension to examine the effect of an abhorrent philosophical perspective. Example: Nazis on one track and innocent individuals on the other.

5. Inclusive Fitness: The degree of relatedness between the participant and the people on the track. Included biological relatives as well as friends and members of the same social group.

6. Elite: Individuals who have attained a high status in society. Example: innocent bystander on one track, famous scientist working on a cure for cancer on the other track.

7. Species: Example: One human on one track, five gorillas on the other track.

8. Endangered: Matched with species dimension, compared endangered species versus nonendangered versus humans.

Results:

  • Across two different studies, four different subject populations were compared: three different groups of U.S. psychology students and one group of Tiawanese students.
  • A number of differences were found across groups in terms of personal beliefs on issues such as abortion, birth control, capital punishment, medical experimentation, religious affiliation, etc.
  • On the moral dimensions manipulated in the fantasy dilemmas, however, there was very little difference across groups. Regardless of sample, individuals made very similar decisions. In other words, individuals favored members of their own species over other species; family (and friends) over strangers; found it more morally acceptable to let someone die than to kill; preferred to save more rather than fewer; utilized social contract information in their decisions; and condemned those who were Nazis. Elitism and indangered had no effect on decisions.
  • The overall order of importance of the dimensions was: Species, Inclusive Fitness, Action-Inaction, Numbers, and Social Contract, Elitism (Nazi and Endangered were not included in the Taiwanese sample). All of these, except Elitism, mattered in determining the outcome of the dilemmas.

Conclusions:

  • The differences which were found on measures of personal belief were uncorrelated with responses on the fantasy dilemmas, suggesting that the nature of moral intuition lies at a deeper, more fundamental level than personal belief. The authors of these studies conclude that the universality of the response patterns on these fantasy dilemmas suggest at least a partial evolved, biological component to human morality.

Petrinovich, Lewis. (1995). Human evolution, reproduction, and morality. New York: Plenum Press.

Petrinovich, L., O'Neill, P. and Jorgensen, M. (1993). An empirical study of moral intuitions: Toward and evolutionary ethics. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 64, 467-478.



Questions for Discussion

1. What are the limitations of the fantasy dilemma methodology? Some possibilities for discussion include:
  • Limited participant sample (even with cross-cultural data, all are students)
  • Paper and pencil, questionnaire methodology (response bias)?
  • How much can we generalize from these responses to actual behavior (and how much does this matter)?

2. How convincing is this data in terms of addressing issues of biology and evolution? Can a sociocultural explanation account for these results?

3. How much of real-world morality can we map on to the universals proposed by the moral intuition research? Do the differing responses on questions of personal belief imply that real-world moral decisions might show greater variability than suggested by these proposed universals?

4. Are there additional types of evidence that might help illuminate the link between biology and morality?



A modern approach to morality

Moral Intuition and Fantasy Dilemmas
  • The basic idea behind the modern evolutionary approach to morality in humans is that at least certain aspects of our moral beliefs and intuitions have a biological basis. In other words, the principals of evolutionary biology (for example the concept of inclusive fitness) might shed light on many of the behavioral tendencies that we consider moral.
  • Several moral issues have been addressed in the study of moral intuition, including:

1. Number - Should the number of individuals who are affected by a decision influence the nature of the recommended action? (i.e. You have the option of saving the life of 1 person or 5 people)

2. Action and omission - Is it more permissible to let someone die than to kill the person?

3. Social contracts - A number of social contracts can affect the morality of a behavioral decision, such as:

a. Whether a promise has previously been made to help one individual over another.

b. Personal rights and ownership

c. Costs and benefits to society

d. Biological associations - Do we feel a moral obligation to kin, or to members of our own species?

  • One way to explore this idea of a biological-based morality has been through the use of fantasy dilemmas, hypothetical situations aimed to assess people's intuitions about moral decisions. For example:

You have access to a lifesaving drug. There is one individual who will die if he does not receive all of the drug. There are five other individuals each of whom only need one-fifth of the drug to survive. Who do you choose to give the drug to: the one person or the five people?







 
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