The trolley problem is a series of thought experiments that should be morally equivalent. In all variations, the reader can choose to take an action that will directly result in the death of an innocent person who was otherwise ‘safe’, or do nothing and allow a larger group of people to die, and ask what is the morally correct choice.
There’s no right answer to the trolley problem. The interesting take away is that what most people agree is the morally correct answer depends how the problem is framed.
When the situation is framed as “you’re deciding between one person dying and many people dying” most people will agree the morally correct choice is the one where the fewest people die.
But when the situation is framed as “are you justified in murdering an innocent person to save many” most people agree the morally correct answer is no.
There’s even one variation where is is considered by most morally correct to murder one person to save many, if the person you’re murdering is responsible for putting the larger group in harms way in the first place.
Op, you are the best <3 you are so insightful and unique and special! I wish everyone could be like you! Our group would profit so much from you! We would be so happy to have you. Why don’t you mail us at [email protected]
Sort-of PS3 Shadow of the Colossus, but the physics engine gives me heart palpitations. Wondering if I should switch to the remaster someday, if that improves anything…
Also, Daemon X Machina on PC, which is fun, but also too story-lite for my preferences.
I picked up Xcom 2 War of the Chosen after walking away for 2 years. Loaded it up and remembered why, half my squad severely wounded and surrounded. Knuckled down and got everyone out alive. Don’t name your soldiers after your friends.
Use PuTTY to set up a reverse tunnel. You’ll need to create a restricted tunnel-only user in your machine. Make sure to use key auth.
From your local machine, connect to localhost:portnumber.
As an alternative, you might be able to set up OpenSSH in Windows (yes it’s possible), then use the ProxyJump setting in your local ~/.ssh/config to connect via a tunnel to the final box.
Here’s how you configure the server to not let the user wreak too much havoc:
<span style="color:#323232;">Match User restricted
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> PermitOpen 127.0.0.1:3389 [::1]:3389
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> X11Forwarding no
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> AllowAgentForwarding no
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ForceCommand /bin/sh -c 'while sleep 999; do true; done'
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ClientAliveInterval 1
</span><span style="color:#323232;"> ClientAliveCountMax 2
</span>
Honestly, any platforms hosting user-generated content who use the legal argument that they only provide hosting and aren’t responsible for what their user post shouldn’t also be able to sell the same data and claim owning any of it.
Otherwise, take away their legal immunity. Nazis or pedophiles post something awful? You get in front of the judge.
Being accepted into a friend group in Junior High (middle school).
I had some kind of neuro-divergence, but undiagnosed since it was the 1960s. No friends, and I couldn’t understand the world; I thought there was some “secret manual” that everyone got except me, telling them how social interactions worked.
Then a band of misfits took me in. There were about 8-10 of them, and some special guest friends that made appearances from time to time. Male and female. All kinds of different people, popular and unpopular. And they accepted me. Weird me. Turned my life completely around.
kbin.life
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