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MORAL DILEMMA

What is Moral Dilemma?


• Cambridge Dictionary: “a situation in which a
choice has to be made between possibilities
that will al have results you do not want”

• Oxford Dictionary: “a situation in which a


difficult choice has to be made between two
or more alternatives, especially ones that are
equally undesirable.”
• At this core, a dilemma is a situation in which a
difficult choice has to be made between two or
more alternatives. More informally, it can mean a
difficult situation or problem (as in the insoluble
dilemma of adolescence). Some traditionalists
object to this weakened use, but it is recorded as
early as the first part of the 17th century, and is now
widespread and generally acceptable. Not that
dilemma is spelled with a double m in the middle,
not as –mn-.
• Early 16th century (denoting a form of
argument involving a choice between equally
unfavourable alternatives): via Latin from
Greek:
Dilemma: di-twice + lemma-premise
• Dilemmas are experiences where an agent is
confused about the right decision to make
because there are several competing values
that are seemingly equally important and
urgent.
Steps in Solving a Moral Dilemma
1. Examine the act in relation to the agent. (The
agent and the facts surrounding the act must
be assessed.)
2. Determine the consequences of the act. (The
principle of consequentialism suggests that
one must weight the consequences of a
human act to determine whether it is moral
or immoral.
3. Identify the intention of the act. (Bad
intention is immoral.)
4. Decide in accordance to divine and natural
laws which govern moral life.
Activity 1
• Using the principles of moral decision-making, answer the
following:
A day before the wedding of your friend, you discovered
that your friend’s spouse-to-be is having an affair with an
officemate. You caught them sneaking out of a hotel together.
What will you do? Explain your answer.
*Tell your friend about the affair but the wedding may not
push through and all the preparations will be cancelled. Your
friend’s happiness will surely be ruined.
*Remain silent; keep the truth from your friend, and allow the
wedding to push through so as not to ruin the most important
even in your friend’s life.
Activity 2
• You are an eyewitness to a robbery. A man robbed
a rich woman for him to pay for his son’s crucial
operation. You know who committed the crime. If
you go to the police to report the crime, there is the
strong possibility that the money will be returned to
the rich woman. What will you do? Will you report
the crime and tell the truth to the police or say
nothing since the money will be used for the
operation and the son will be saved. Justify your
answer.
Activity 3
• On your way home one night, you figured in a car
accident. While driving your car, you accidentally
hit and killed a pedestrian. As you got out of the
car, you were intercepted by a crying lady who
thought that she was the one who hit and killed the
pedestrian. There were only three people on the
scene: you, the lady, and the dead person you hit
on the road. There were other witnesses. Thus you
know that whoever is responsible will be sent to
jail. What will you do? Explain your answer.

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