{"id":18131,"date":"2026-02-13T13:02:09","date_gmt":"2026-02-13T13:02:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/purpose.lifestruepurpose.org\/?p=18131"},"modified":"2026-02-13T13:02:09","modified_gmt":"2026-02-13T13:02:09","slug":"a-real-shipwreck-case-turns-philosophy-into-a-courtroom-nightmare-cannibalism-necessity-and-the-question-nobody-escapes-is-murder-ever-allowed-if-it-saves-more-lives","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purpose.lifestruepurpose.org\/?p=18131","title":{"rendered":"A Real Shipwreck Case Turns Philosophy Into a Courtroom Nightmare: Cannibalism, \u201cNecessity,\u201d and the Question Nobody Escapes\u2014Is Murder Ever Allowed If It Saves More Lives?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"relative basis-auto flex-col -mb-(--composer-overlap-px) [--composer-overlap-px:28px] grow flex\">\n<div class=\"flex flex-col text-sm pb-25\">\n<article class=\"text-token-text-primary w-full focus:outline-none [--shadow-height:45px] has-data-writing-block:pointer-events-none has-data-writing-block:-mt-(--shadow-height) has-data-writing-block:pt-(--shadow-height) [&amp;:has([data-writing-block])&gt;*]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]\" dir=\"auto\" data-turn-id=\"request-69899b61-062c-83a0-8241-939a495446e1-6\" data-testid=\"conversation-turn-142\" data-scroll-anchor=\"true\" data-turn=\"assistant\">\n<div class=\"text-base my-auto mx-auto pb-10 [--thread-content-margin:--spacing(4)] @w-sm\/main:[--thread-content-margin:--spacing(6)] @w-lg\/main:[--thread-content-margin:--spacing(16)] px-(--thread-content-margin)\">\n<div class=\"[--thread-content-max-width:40rem] @w-lg\/main:[--thread-content-max-width:48rem] mx-auto max-w-(--thread-content-max-width) flex-1 group\/turn-messages focus-visible:outline-hidden relative flex w-full min-w-0 flex-col agent-turn\">\n<div class=\"flex max-w-full flex-col grow\">\n<div class=\"min-h-8 text-message relative flex w-full flex-col items-end gap-2 text-start break-words whitespace-normal [.text-message+&amp;]:mt-1\" dir=\"auto\" data-message-author-role=\"assistant\" data-message-id=\"d5dfe9ca-eeb7-4acf-9d93-ea1b6d2c9941\" data-message-model-slug=\"gpt-5-2-thinking\">\n<div class=\"flex w-full flex-col gap-1 empty:hidden first:pt-[1px]\">\n<div class=\"markdown prose dark:prose-invert w-full wrap-break-word dark markdown-new-styling\">\n<p data-start=\"372\" data-end=\"1298\">This introductory Justice lecture doesn\u2019t begin with laws, rights, or a clean definition of fairness. It begins by shaking the student\u2019s confidence in their own moral certainty. The professor uses classic dilemmas to show that most people already carry strong moral instincts, but those instincts often collide the moment the situation changes\u2014even when the outcome looks identical on paper. The first case is the trolley problem in its \u201cdriver\u201d form: a runaway trolley is heading toward five workers, and the driver can divert it onto another track where it will kill one person instead. Many students say they would turn the trolley, because the decision seems like a tragic but rational trade\u2014minimize deaths, save more people. Right away, the lecture uses that reaction to highlight a familiar style of reasoning: judging actions by consequences and choosing the option that produces the best overall outcome.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"1300\" data-end=\"2150\">But the lecture then repeats the same numbers in a way that exposes a deeper moral discomfort. In the \u201cbridge\u201d version, you are not a driver pulling a lever; you are a bystander who can stop the trolley only by pushing a very large man off a bridge, killing him to save the five on the track. Even though the result is still \u201cone dies so five live,\u201d most people refuse to push. The professor\u2019s point is not to mock anyone\u2014it\u2019s to ask why the moral verdict flips. If outcomes were the only thing that mattered, the answers should match. Yet most students feel a difference between redirecting harm and intentionally using a person as a tool, between \u201cletting one die\u201d and \u201cmaking someone die,\u201d between impersonal distance and direct personal force. The lecture is basically saying: your moral judgment depends on more than a scoreboard of lives saved.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"2152\" data-end=\"3114\">To make the tension even sharper, the professor introduces medical dilemmas. In an emergency room scenario, the choice is between saving one severely injured patient or five moderately injured ones. Many students again lean toward saving five. But then comes the transplant scenario: could a surgeon kill one healthy person to harvest organs and save five others? Almost everyone rejects that option immediately. The class is forced to confront a pattern: people often support \u201csave the greater number\u201d until the act requires deliberately killing an innocent person. By the end of Part 1, the lecture has done its job: it has surfaced the central conflict of the course\u2014our intuitions pull us toward outcomes in some cases, and toward inviolable moral boundaries in others. The rest of the course will ask whether those boundaries can be defended with reasons, not just feelings, and whether outcome-based thinking can avoid turning people into disposable parts.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"3116\" data-end=\"4022\"><strong data-start=\"3116\" data-end=\"3126\">Part 2<\/strong><br data-start=\"3126\" data-end=\"3129\" \/>After the dilemmas expose the contradictions in our gut reactions, the lecture gives the class the philosophical tools to describe what\u2019s happening. One tool is <strong data-start=\"3290\" data-end=\"3310\">consequentialism<\/strong>, the view that the morality of an action depends on its results. If you care most about reducing harm or maximizing wellbeing, then saving five rather than one looks obviously better. This framework sounds practical, especially in public policy, where leaders constantly face tradeoffs and must justify hard decisions with measurable outcomes. The lecture connects consequentialism to <strong data-start=\"3696\" data-end=\"3714\">utilitarianism<\/strong>, especially as developed by <strong data-start=\"3743\" data-end=\"3761\">Jeremy Bentham<\/strong> (and later refined by <strong data-start=\"3784\" data-end=\"3804\">John Stuart Mill<\/strong>): the idea that we should act to maximize overall happiness or \u201cutility.\u201d Utilitarianism is attractive because it offers a clear direction\u2014count up benefits and harms, then choose what creates the greatest total good.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"4024\" data-end=\"5067\">But the lecture doesn\u2019t present this as a neat victory. It uses the transplant case (and the bridge case) to show why many people resist pure outcome-based logic. If the only rule is \u201cmaximize good outcomes,\u201d then horrifying actions can become permissible whenever they increase the total. That triggers a second tool: <strong data-start=\"4343\" data-end=\"4374\">categorical moral reasoning<\/strong>, the idea that some actions are wrong in themselves, regardless of how much good they produce. Under this view, moral duties and individual rights matter so deeply that they can block even the most beneficial calculation. The lecture previews <strong data-start=\"4618\" data-end=\"4635\">Immanuel Kant<\/strong> as the key figure here, especially his idea of the <strong data-start=\"4687\" data-end=\"4713\">categorical imperative<\/strong>\u2014unconditional moral requirements that don\u2019t bend just because breaking them would be useful. Even without going deep into Kant\u2019s full system yet, the lecture makes the basic contrast vivid: utilitarian thinking tempts us to treat people like numbers, while categorical thinking insists people must never be treated merely as means to someone else\u2019s end.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"5069\" data-end=\"6161\">This is also where the course\u2019s broader purpose becomes clear. These frameworks aren\u2019t only for hypotheticals\u2014they shape real arguments about law and politics. When society debates free speech limits, equality, punishment, or military conscription, people often disagree because they\u2019re using different moral \u201cengines.\u201d Some argue like consequentialists: \u201cWhat policy produces the best overall outcomes?\u201d Others argue like categorical thinkers: \u201cWhat policy respects rights and dignity no matter what?\u201d The lecture warns students that studying justice will feel personal and even politically uncomfortable, because philosophy doesn\u2019t just add new information\u2014it challenges the foundations of beliefs students already hold. It even acknowledges skepticism (the temptation to say \u201cthere\u2019s no answer\u201d), but pushes back: moral judgment is unavoidable in real life, so refusing to think carefully is itself a choice with consequences. Part 2 sets the stage for the course\u2019s method: debate, confrontation with hard cases, and learning to defend moral claims with reasons rather than instinct alone.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"6163\" data-end=\"6717\"><strong data-start=\"6163\" data-end=\"6173\">Part 3<\/strong><br data-start=\"6173\" data-end=\"6176\" \/>To prove that this isn\u2019t just a classroom game, the lecture turns to a real legal and moral controversy: <strong data-start=\"6281\" data-end=\"6313\">Queen v. Dudley and Stephens<\/strong>. The facts are brutal in a way that forces philosophy to become real. After a shipwreck, four sailors are stranded without food or water. As desperation grows, Dudley and Stephens kill the cabin boy, Richard Parker, and cannibalize him to survive. When they are rescued, they are arrested and tried for murder, arguing <strong data-start=\"6633\" data-end=\"6646\">necessity<\/strong> as their defense\u2014claiming that the killing was required to save lives.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"6719\" data-end=\"7463\">This case becomes the lecture\u2019s \u201creal-world trolley problem,\u201d except it\u2019s not hypothetical and not clean. Students immediately feel the pull of consequentialist reasoning: if everyone would have died otherwise, doesn\u2019t survival change the moral calculus? But categorical moral reasoning strikes back hard: does desperation erase the wrongness of murder, or does it prove why murder must remain forbidden\u2014because once killing becomes \u201callowed\u201d when useful, the weakest person will always be at risk? The lecture uses the class debate to sharpen moral questions that will echo throughout the course: if an act is wrong, can circumstances ever make it right? If outcomes matter, do they matter enough to override a person\u2019s right not to be killed?<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"7465\" data-end=\"8424\">Then come two \u201cescape routes\u201d students often reach for\u2014<strong data-start=\"7520\" data-end=\"7533\">procedure<\/strong> and <strong data-start=\"7538\" data-end=\"7549\">consent<\/strong>\u2014and the lecture shows how complicated they are. Some ask whether a fair lottery would make it morally acceptable: if everyone had an equal chance of being chosen, would the killing become less unjust? Others ask about consent: if the victim agreed, would that change the moral status of the act? The lecture pushes back by highlighting how \u201cfairness\u201d can be morally thin if the act itself is still murder, and how \u201cconsent\u201d can be morally unstable when people are trapped, starving, and coerced by circumstance. Even if a lottery seems fair, it may still institutionalize a horrifying principle: that human life can be traded like currency. Even if consent is offered, it might not be truly free under extreme threat. The case forces the class to confront an uncomfortable possibility: some moral lines may exist precisely for moments when breaking them feels most tempting.<\/p>\n<p data-start=\"8426\" data-end=\"9215\" data-is-last-node=\"\" data-is-only-node=\"\">By ending with Dudley and Stephens, the lecture closes the loop: trolley problems aren\u2019t pointless puzzles\u2014they\u2019re training for the kinds of conflicts law and society must actually judge. The lecture\u2019s final impact is to leave students with a clear map of the terrain: one path emphasizes consequences and collective welfare; another path emphasizes duties, rights, and human dignity; and most real disputes about justice arise because these paths sometimes point in opposite directions. The course will move forward by testing both frameworks against additional philosophers and real controversies, not to hand students easy answers, but to force them to explain\u2014carefully and honestly\u2014why they believe what they believe when the stakes are life, death, and the meaning of justice itself.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>This introductory Justice lecture doesn\u2019t begin with laws, rights, or a clean definition of fairness. It begins by shaking the student\u2019s confidence in their own moral certainty. The professor uses classic dilemmas to show that most people already carry strong moral instincts, but those instincts often collide the moment the situation changes\u2014even when the outcome [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":18136,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"tdm_status":"","tdm_grid_status":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-18131","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v26.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>A Real Shipwreck Case Turns Philosophy Into a Courtroom Nightmare: Cannibalism, \u201cNecessity,\u201d and the Question Nobody Escapes\u2014Is Murder Ever Allowed If It Saves More Lives? - Purposeful Days<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/purpose.lifestruepurpose.org\/?p=18131\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"A Real Shipwreck Case Turns Philosophy Into a Courtroom Nightmare: Cannibalism, \u201cNecessity,\u201d and the Question Nobody Escapes\u2014Is Murder Ever Allowed If It Saves More Lives? - Purposeful Days\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"This introductory Justice lecture doesn\u2019t begin with laws, rights, or a clean definition of fairness. 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