fresh bytes
Subscribe Now

Using a foreign language affects your ethical reasoning

train.jpg

You’re standing on a footbridge overlooking a train track. A train is coming down that track. It is about to hit and kill five people.

A very heavy man is also on the bridge. If you push him off the bridge, his body will stop the train, but it will also kill him.

Would you push him?

How you answer this ethical dilemma may be affected by the language in which you hear it. Researchers at the University of Chicago and Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona found that when people encountered this dilemma in a foriegn language, they were more likely to take the utilitarian option: pushing the man off the footbridge. Science 2.0 reports:

The researchers collected data from people in the U.S., Spain, Korea, France and Israel. Across all populations, more participants selected the utilitarian choice — to save five by killing one — when the dilemmas were presented in the foreign language than when they did the problem in their native tongue.
via Neatorama

Continue reading 

Image: Elliott Brown

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Feb 18, 2026
Because sometimes the best replacement part'¦ is the one you already have!...

featured chalk talk

Speed Matters: Methods and Methodologies to Get the Most Performance
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Ludovic Jacomme from Siemens and Amelia Dalton investigate the benefits that Siemens Veloce proFPGA CS can bring to your next FPGA-based prototyping project and how you can take advantage of this solution today.
Jan 19, 2026
38,604 views