Anakin Skywalker (
sith_happened) wrote in
fandomhigh2011-01-27 09:28 am
Entry tags:
Ethics [Thursday, January 27, 2011, first period]
"I know that Blackagar and his friend covered lying when they took over during my absense," Anakin said with a little nod toward his TA, "but today I wished to revisit it with a Fandom slant. Here, where multiple timelines meet and mingle, lying can be a terribly complex subject."
He gazed around the room. "We have students here from different centuries who by stepping foot onto the island learn immediately about electricity, electronics and reality television. Depending on societies they arrive from, they could learn about guns--or even the very concept of war--and change their worlds irrevocably."
Anakin began pacing. "Sometimes the situation is even more specific. Several years ago, a student arrived here who I knew--but I knew him as a Jedi Master I'd met when I was a small child. I also knew that his death, at least in my timeline, had been a violent one. A teacher I had used to say that the future is constantly in motion, but my experience with multiple timelines seems to show that certain large events tend to stay constant. Did I have an obligation to tell this student about his future? Or do I respect his timeline and his ability to make his own decisions?"
He sat back down. "The questions today are these: if you have knowledge of the future, what parts would you lie about--even through omission--from someone further behind in the timeline? And if you met someone from your future, would you want to know anything about what you might face someday? Would you respect them for not telling you everything? Or even anything?"
He gazed around the room. "We have students here from different centuries who by stepping foot onto the island learn immediately about electricity, electronics and reality television. Depending on societies they arrive from, they could learn about guns--or even the very concept of war--and change their worlds irrevocably."
Anakin began pacing. "Sometimes the situation is even more specific. Several years ago, a student arrived here who I knew--but I knew him as a Jedi Master I'd met when I was a small child. I also knew that his death, at least in my timeline, had been a violent one. A teacher I had used to say that the future is constantly in motion, but my experience with multiple timelines seems to show that certain large events tend to stay constant. Did I have an obligation to tell this student about his future? Or do I respect his timeline and his ability to make his own decisions?"
He sat back down. "The questions today are these: if you have knowledge of the future, what parts would you lie about--even through omission--from someone further behind in the timeline? And if you met someone from your future, would you want to know anything about what you might face someday? Would you respect them for not telling you everything? Or even anything?"

Re: Answer the discussion questions [1/27]
"If ... if it's not just me, from the weird timeline? Then I can tell someone else. But if it is, I mean ... it seems unfair to put them in that position. Except an outside perspective might help. I think ..."
She gave him a rueful smile. "I think, whether or not I should go to someone else, that that's what I'd end up doing. Even if it's not the most ethical thing, I wouldn't be able to handle it myself, so I'd pull them in, too."
Re: Answer the discussion questions [1/27]
He paused. "Except for maybe Deadpool."