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Full Idea
The doctrine of double effect offers us a way out [of the trolley problem], insisting that it is one thing to steer towards someone foreseeing that you will kill him, and another to aim at his death as part of your plan.
Gist of Idea
Double effect says foreseeing you will kill someone is not the same as intending it
Source
Philippa Foot (Abortion and the Doctrine of Double Effect [1967], p.23)
Book Ref
Foot,Philippa: 'Virtues and Vices' [Blackwell 1981], p.23
A Reaction
[She has just created her famous Trolley Problem]. Utilitarians must constantly rely on the doctrine of double effect, as they calculate their trade-offs.
Related Idea
Idea 22385 The doctrine of double effect can excuse an outcome because it wasn't directly intended [Foot]
22384 | A 'double effect' is a foreseen but not desired side-effect, which may be forgivable [Foot] |
22385 | The doctrine of double effect can excuse an outcome because it wasn't directly intended [Foot] |
22386 | Double effect says foreseeing you will kill someone is not the same as intending it [Foot] |
22387 | Without double effect, bad men can make us do evil by threatening something worse [Foot] |
22388 | Double effect seems to rely on a distinction between what we do and what we allow [Foot] |
22466 | We see a moral distinction between our aims and their foreseen consequences [Foot] |
22465 | We see a moral distinction between doing and allowing to happen [Foot] |
22467 | Acts and omissions only matter if they concern doing something versus allowing it [Foot] |
23578 | Double Effect needs a double intention - to achieve the good, and minimise the evil [Walzer] |
4657 | Double Effect: no bad acts with good consequences, but possibly good acts despite bad consequences [Glover] |
6896 | Double effect is the distinction between what is foreseen and what is intended [Mautner] |
6897 | Double effect acts need goodness, unintended evil, good not caused by evil, and outweighing [Mautner] |
7293 | It is legitimate to do harm if it is the unintended side-effect of an effort to achieve a good [Grayling] |
20068 | Describing a death as a side-effect rather than a goal may just be good public relations [Stout,R] |