this post was submitted on 12 Jan 2026
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[–] Objection@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

The thing is; those moral systems and critiques of the problem are all ideological.

You are making me seriously reconsider my impression of Finland's educational system.

Every hotshot freshman walks into Philosophy 101 thinking that everybody else's ideas are "ideological" while theirs are just "common sense" (nevermind that they all believe different things). If the professor does their job properly, and the students aren't completely obstinate, then they will leave Philosophy 101 understanding that this is not a valid way of understanding anything.

Anyone who claims that everyone else is operating based on ideology and they are not, is simply unaware of their own ideology. And being unaware of it, that ideology has a far greater hold on them than it otherwise might.

The Trolley Problem isn't even meant to have a definite answer. The thought experiment was developed for the explicit purpose of demonstrating how people's moral intuitions differ, as do different schools of moral philosophy. To think, "Pulling the level is obviously objectively correct, and this is a non-ideological claim" is completely and utterly absurd and demonstrates total ignorance of moral philosophy.

What do you think the point of philosophy even is if all it's theories can be dismissed as "ideological" and your own personal "common sense" is a reliable way of determining truth?