首页
登录
职称英语
In the grand scheme of things Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill are normal
In the grand scheme of things Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill are normal
游客
2024-12-24
14
管理
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. [br] Psychopathic or Machiavellian people are expected to make the laws probably because
选项
A、common people are tired of the current policy-makers.
B、policy-making will be based on utilitarianism.
C、they are good at making laws and policies.
D、they are likely to bring up brand-new policies.
答案
B
解析
推断题。由题干中的Psychopathic or Machiavellian定位至末段最后两句。根据倒数第二段末句和首段末句可以判断,功利主义者可以为最多数人带来最大利益,如果他们制定法律,也是基于功利主义的基础上,故[B]符合文意。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3882529.html
相关试题推荐
Animationmeansmakingthingswhicharelifelesscomeliveandmove.Sincee
Animationmeansmakingthingswhicharelifelesscomeliveandmove.Sincee
Animationmeansmakingthingswhicharelifelesscomeliveandmove.Sincee
Animationmeansmakingthingswhicharelifelesscomeliveandmove.Sincee
InthegrandschemeofthingsJeremyBenthamandJohnStuartMillarenormal
InthegrandschemeofthingsJeremyBenthamandJohnStuartMillarenormal
InthegrandschemeofthingsJeremyBenthamandJohnStuartMillarenormal
WhichofthefollowingisNOTmentionedbytheauthoramongthingsthatareinhe
WhichofthefollowingisNOTmentionedbytheauthoramongthingsthatareinhe
WhichofthefollowingisNOTmentionedbytheauthoramongthingsthatareinhe
随机试题
ConsumerDemandandDevelopmentofGreenCarsThedayautomakers
Maslow’sHierarchyofNeedsAbrahamMaslowhasdeveloped
PASSAGEONELectures,seminars,tutorialsandlaboratoryclasses.本题答案可以在第二段第一句话中找到:
允许和鼓励一部分人通过诚实劳动、合法经营先富起来,这是()A.治贫的权宜之计
企业集团财务公司为我国金融发展的贡献包括()。A.节省了企业集团的融资成本
(2022年真题)20世纪前,在西方占主导地位的医学理论分析框架把残疾看做是“功
共用题干 某房地产开发企业以4000万元竞拍到一宗别墅用地的土地使用权。该地块
下列各项中,需要计算缴纳增值税的是( )。A.被保险人获得的保险赔付 B.航
银行承兑汇票的承兑银行,应当按照票面金额向出票人收取()的手续费。A:千分之一
下列因素中,对资金等值没有影响的因素是()。A、资金数额的多少 B、资金发生
最新回复
(
0
)