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The first scenario described the crew of a yacht stranded at sea in a small lifeboat. They were starving and parched. For the crew to survive, they decided they would need to kill a member for food and liquid. The crewmember in the worst shape was the cabin boy. They hypothesized that because he was already so close to death, they should kill him to preserve their own lives. They also did not believe they would be rescued. I said I was quite confident that they were not morally justified in killing him. I thought they probably could have found a way to catch fish to feed themselves, as they were stranded in the ocean. I also believe that because the boy was very weak, and possibly not in his right mind, he could not have consented. In this case, it wasn’t divulged whether he consented. …show more content…
Her staff was begging her to end their families’ lives to avoid horrendous suffering at the hands of the Nazis. The doctor gave their families morphine before going to the ward that housed the infants and children and dosing them with morphine, as well. She saw this as her duty to protect them from a future where they would probably die anyway. I said I was very confident that she was not justified in killing her young patients. I reasoned, like the passage did, that the children and infants could not have consented. I also reasoned that although unlikely, it was possible that the children could grow up and survive the Nazi regime, or be partly responsible for their

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