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Replying to @nwilliams030
are there studies of life guard bias? this looks like a veritable trolley problem that is more pertinent and frequent than for self driving cars...
1 reply 1 retweet 4 likes -
Replying to @Plinz @nwilliams030
rare to see more than one drowning person and there are methods for handling those cases usually not a trolley problem, at worst choosing which drowning person to save first/directly
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suppose it's played out over time though. allow some to drown (through inaction, or slow-rolling) while choosing to save others.
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yeah doesn't usually go down like that hard/tiresome/boring to explain on mobile Twitter as I get stoned but basically you're unlikely to get to an action/inaction trade-off with different people/groups
3 replies 0 retweets 1 like
with multiple drowning victims in particular--esp if they're "active" drowning like you're probably imagining--you can use direct rescue of one victim to trick the other panicking people to start swimming
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