首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
In the grand scheme of things Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill are normally thought of as good guys. Between them, they came
In the grand scheme of things Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill are normally thought of as good guys. Between them, they came
admin
2012-12-30
34
问题
In the grand scheme of things Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill are normally thought of as good guys. Between them, they came up with the ethical theory known as utilitarianism. The goal of this theory is encapsulated in Bentham’s aphorism that "the greatest happiness of the greatest number is the foundation of morals and legislation."
It all sounds fine and dandy until you start applying it to particular cases. A utilitarian, for example, might approve of the occasional torture of suspected terrorists—for the greater happiness of everyone else, you understand. That type of observation has led Daniel Bartels at Columbia University and David Pizarro at Cornell to ask what sort of people actually do have a utilitarian outlook on life. Their answers, just published in Cognition, are not comfortable.
One of the classic techniques used to measure a person’s willingness to behave in a utilitarian way is known as trolleyology.
The subject of the study is challenged with thought experiments involving a runaway railway trolley or train carriage. All involve choices, each of which leads to people’s deaths. For example: there are five railway workmen in the path of a runaway carriage. The men will surely be killed unless the subject of the experiment, a bystander in the story, does something. The subject is told he is on a bridge over the tracks. Next to him is a big, heavy stranger. The subject is informed that his own body would be too light to stop the train, but that if he pushes the stranger onto the tracks, the stranger’s large body will stop the train and save the five lives. That, unfortunately, would kill the stranger.
Dr Bartels and Dr Pizarro knew from previous research that around 90% of people refuse the utilitarian act of killing one individual to save five. What no one had previously inquired about, though, was the nature of the remaining 10%.
To find out, the two researchers gave 208 undergraduates a battery of trolleyological tests and measured, on a four-point scale, how utilitarian their responses were. Participants were also asked to respond to a series of statements intended to get a sense of their individual psychologies. These statements included, "I like to see fist fights", "The best way to handle people is to tell them what they want to hear", and "When you really think about it, life is not worth the effort of getting up in the morning". Each was asked to indicate, for each statement, where his views lay on a continuum that had "strongly agree" at one end and "strongly disagree" at the other. These statements, and others like them, were designed to measure, respectively, psychopathy, Machiavellianism and a person’s sense of how meaningful life is.
Dr Bartels and Dr Pizarro then correlated the results from the trolleyology with those from the personality tests. They found a strong link between utilitarian answers to moral dilemmas (push the fat guy off the bridge) and personalities that were psychopathic. Machiavellian or tended to view life as meaningless. Utilitarians, this suggests, may add to the sum of human happiness, but they are not very happy people themselves.
That does not make utilitarianism wrong. Crafting legislation—one of the main things that Bentham and Mill wanted to improve— inevitably involves riding roughshod over someone’s interests. Utilitarianism provides a plausible framework for deciding who should get trampled. The results obtained by Dr Bartels and Dr Pizarro do, though, raise questions about the type of people who you want making the laws. Psychopathic, Machiavellian misanthropes? Apparently, yes.
Which of the following statements is INCORRECT of the experiment?
选项
A、The subject entered a hypnotic state.
B、Similar experiments had been done before.
C、It found out something that is unknown to all.
D、Trolleyology is a technique to analyze utilitarianism.
答案
A
解析
细节题。按照试题顺序及选项中的subject定位至第四段。第四段首句指出“The subject of the study is challenged with thought experiments involving a runaway railway trolley or train carriage.”,句中的thought experiments意为“思维实验”,不能得出受试者被催眠的结论,故[A]为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/HDUYFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
WhichofthefollowingisconsideredanAmericanmasterpiece?
TheEffectivenessofaPerson1.believethereisnosuchthingas(1),【1】______sothesolutionis(2)whenitisoptimumor
InthenewmillenniumIwanttoseedisabledpeopleacquiringthesamedegreeofcontrolovertheirlivesthatotherpeoplehave
AbreakthroughintheprovisionofenergyfromthesunfortheEuropeanEconomicCommunity(EEC)couldbebroughtforwardbyup
Meteorologistsroutinelytelluswhatnextweek’sweatherislikelytohe,andclimatescientistsdiscusswhatmighthappenin1
Modernlinguisticsdiffersfromtraditionalgrammarforitismostly
Who’stoblamefortheapproximately$2agallonmostAmericanspaidforgasolineontheirThanksgivingDaytravels?Toquote
A、Federalgovernment.B、Thehorse-lovers.C、Thepeoplewhokillthewildhorse.D、Thenativepeople.C
WhatwasthecauseofWarofIndependence?
AftertheWarofIndependence,Americansdesignedanewsystem.Whatwasit?
随机试题
在雨淋自动喷水灭火系统中,应设置充气和气压维持装置。该装置是雨淋系统的重要组成部分,主要用于向系统侧管网充气和保持系统侧管网内气压。()
殷人好鬼神,他们祈祷的主要对象是______。
女性,52岁,因肝癌破裂大出血就诊,立即给予输血。当输血50ml时,病人出现烦躁不安,心前区压迫感,腰背酸痛,尿呈酱油色,血压70/40mmHg。除停止输血外,对该患者还应采取的措施是
电子地图的设计一般不包括()。
企业发生的下列支出中,可以在计算企业应纳税所得额时全额扣除的项目有()。
根据“企业节约能源管理升级(定级)规定”,下列说法中正确的是()
列举三种美术创作课的教学方法。
如果一个基因的中部缺失了1个核苷酸对,可能的后果是()。
某地发生矿难后,一个遇难者的爷爷拉着干部说:“为什么死的是我孙子,你们这些当官的怎么不去死。”其他矿难者家属情绪也很激动,请问如果你是这名干部,该怎么处理?
有如下类声明:classXA{intX;public:XA(intn){x=n;}};classXB:publicXA{inty;public:XB(inta,intb
最新回复
(
0
)