The Trolley Problem and the Ethics of Autonomous Vehicles in the Eyes of the Public: Experimental Evidence

In David Černý, Ryan Jenkins & Tomáš Hříbek (eds.), Autonomous Vehicles Ethics: Beyond the Trolley Problem. Oxford University Press. pp. 80-98 (2022)
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Abstract

The trolley problem is a classic thought experiment that evokes an ethical dilemma. Thomson’s “bystander” and “footbridge” versions of the trolley problem induce different intuitive judgments about what to choose in the ethical dilemma. However, we can question how robust these intuitive judgments are. We thus conducted an online survey experiment of Thomson’s versions of the trolley problem which showed that more respondents tended to choose not pulling the lever in the bystander version and pushing a person off the bridge in the footbridge version when they believed they were not being watched. These results illustrate that people’s decisions deviate from the social norms in the absence of the public’s attention. To activate the practice of holding the manufacturers to a normative expectation based on the social norms, we suggest the law must be changed.

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