I would still think that it would be bad for people to have to worry about being drafted as sacrificial lambs because other people could not avoid being kidnapped by crazed philosophers.
One of the implications of the crazed-philosopher setup, though, is that there are well-enforced laws against tying people to railroad tracks, so that should be a rare occurrence, not something that people should have to take into consideration in their day to day lives. (So should ‘workers on a section of track that’s not protected from trains’, actually—OSHA would have something to say about it, I’m sure. I still prefer the crazed philosophers, though. They’re funny.) You do have a point, but that’s an issue that we as a society have already resolved in many cases.
I would still think that it would be bad for people to have to worry about being drafted as sacrificial lambs because other people could not avoid being kidnapped by crazed philosophers.
One of the implications of the crazed-philosopher setup, though, is that there are well-enforced laws against tying people to railroad tracks, so that should be a rare occurrence, not something that people should have to take into consideration in their day to day lives. (So should ‘workers on a section of track that’s not protected from trains’, actually—OSHA would have something to say about it, I’m sure. I still prefer the crazed philosophers, though. They’re funny.) You do have a point, but that’s an issue that we as a society have already resolved in many cases.