luchog
Neo-Post-Retro-Revivalist
I've always hated that type of analogy, since it attempts to shift the moral imperative from the villian to the victim, and falsely limit the choices in such a scenario to an untenable degree. The key issue here is that the villian is going to kill one of the two, regardless of which the victim chooses. The ultimate culpability is that of the villian, not the victim. Regardless of what choice the victim makes, there is no blood on his hands, only on the hands of the villian who creates and enacts the scenario.Here, I got a better one. Say a Nazi officer had a Jew and your 10-year-old son both in handcuffs, and you are somehow forced to decide which one will die, without any alternative choices (including some kind of macho suicide-thing). Which one would you choose, and why? Tough choice? Just keep adding family members versus the one single Jewish prisoner until the decision becomes easier. Which choice is "brave"? Which is "cowardly"?
The truly brave, moral act is to refuse to make that choice; to refuse to allow one's self to become involved in the murder in any way. Instead, one should attempt to resolve the scenario in a way that results in no one being murdered. Fighting back, attempting to reason with the villian, stalling until help arrives, etc. -- these are the only truly moral choices; and always options, regardless of any artifical hypothetical boundaries that one may posit. Furthermore, there is no guarantee that the villian will accept the choice, and will simply kill who he chooses; or that he will not simply murder both, and possibly the victim as well. Acceeding to the villian's demand to choose is to aquiesce to murder. To accept it as inevitable, and a valid moral choice.