The Question wrote:Wrong, Wong.
Wow, did you think that up all by yourself?
1) The point of the whistleblower scenario was that the engineer had responsibility to blow the whistle because he is an employee of the company, and thus in part responsible for what the company produces.
Thus showing that you missed the whole point of the "whistle blower" scenario, since you're trying to turn it into a "responsible for problem" scenario. Perhaps I should have anticipated your evasive nitpickery and pointed out that the engineer in question has nothing whatsoever to do with the faulty design in question. In a large company, it is quite conceivable that one does not even work for the same branch of the company which designed the part in question. If you work for a multi-national conglomerate, do you think you're responsible for everything done by every part of that conglomerate?
What if I simply change the scenario to the classic "engineer inspects a building site for its foundation and just happens to notice something wrong with the blueprints for the building's main structure" scenario, in order to close the loophole through which you are desperately trying to squeeze your ass? In that case, there is no direct connection whatsoever. You feel there is no moral obligation either, yet it is CRUCIAL for public safety that engineering professional associations demand that obligation of their members.
2) I stated and state again that a person has no moral obligation to help others if he has not or is not party to the violation -- or in the case of the engineer, the imminent violation -- of another's person's rights.
You are still assuming that someone's rights have been violated by having a less-than-ideal product. Which right is that, in particular?
3) Having no moral obligation to ameliorate the condition of another's suffering doesn't preclude the option one has to choose to help others - it simply recognizes that he is helping from charity, not moral obligation.
Need is never, ever a just claim on the rights of others.
Still beating on your strawman, eh? Moral systems tell us what is best for us to do. You are trying to say that if moral system A says you should help people, then it's really saying that you have no rights if those people want you to help them. That is a gross distortion, it has been pointed out several times, and you refuse to admit it.
Saying that you have a moral obligation to help people means that the most moral course of action is to help people. It does not mean your rights have been taken away! What part of this are you too dense to understand?
4) The boy in the room scenario is flawed -
A) it is his parent or guardians responsibility to see to the boy's welfare, as they are steward's of his rights.
B) the presumption the kid could not eat unless the guard is dealt with inherently presupposes the kid is imprisoned, thus I am, too. As such, both our rights are violated, and I would act in defense of my rights from the obligation I have to defend my own rights.
C) I would choose to help the boy, because it comports with my self-chosen values, not because I am obligated, as such.
A
moral obligation is not one that carries force, you idiot. It is that which your values compel you to do.
D) These kinds of scenarios tell a great deal about people's view of man - they see him in his natural state as a being without exercisable volition, trapped by circumstances beyond his control, helpless.
Never miss an opportunity to get up on that soapbox and rant about the perceived psychological motives of your opponents, eh? Maybe the scenario is simply designed to test your ethical system.
When an engineer tests a brake system, does he subject it to normal use, or extreme use? Do you understand the concept of testing?
Sorry, I don't see man in that light. Emergency and lifeboat ethics have their place in discussion, but the moral man recognizes such are the rare and extreme conditions, not the normal state of man.
Hey, maybe you don't read the news, but suffering is much more common than comfort in this world, dumb-ass.