Ethical behavior is sincere and deceptive. I will ignore sympathy. It is kind and malicious. All of them represent the extremes of the moral category. From a general social point of view, the former represents an attitude to be praised, rewarded and imitated, the latter representing an attitude to be hated, punished and insulted. Today, philosophers are not satisfied with leaving enough to leave enough, but I am trying to find out why. Why do we praise our benevolent behavior?
Welcome to the trolley problem. In the history of human beings, we must systemize the former morality (meaning Latin before the experience) into morality. Our law is designed to deal with the consequences of actions. Our ethics explains what we should do, the first person. But now, we need to write a code of ethics for third parties. We will decide in advance the life and death of those who may not be born. The trolley problem was once a typical hypothetical example in philosophy, but there is no application in the real world. This is a pure thought experiment. Now that the engineers are writing the application, the insurance company is trying to figure out who has the problem (driver, other driver, software company writing the code?). Please kill for just in case
Traditional philosophical debate on moral responsibility focuses on human factors of ethical behavior. An explanation of how to condemn moral responsibility usually explains the behavior of human acts to perform with obvious and immediate results. However, in today's growing technology society, human activities can not be understood correctly without reference to technical artifacts, which complicates attribution of moral responsibility (Jonas 1984; Waelbers 2009 ). As we interact with these artifacts and pass through them, they affect the decisions we make and how they make them (Latour 1992). They will persuade, promote and support certain human cognitive processes, behaviors or attitudes while restricting others, discouraging and suppressing others. For example, Internet search engines prioritize and present information in a particular order and affect what Internet users can see.