Jemini
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We see this theme coming up a lot in stories. One famous example of late would be The Last of Us, in which the game's final challenge in the scenario is whether to let the girl you've been escorting the entire game be killed and dissected to find out why she's immune to the zombie virus and potentially save all of humanity, or fight to save her and keep her alive.
In Star Trek, meanwhile, Spock would famously say "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few" as though it were his mantra, pushing it as a standard of logic that it is preferable to sacrifice the few to benefit the many, and to do anything else is a decision couched in emotion.
Fictional scenarios like the above repeat themselves again and again in fiction, often with it taken to the extreme of sacrificing the one to benefit all of humanity or even the entire survival of the world itself.
This is a trope we really could analyze to death. I have my thoughts on it, but I will put them in spoilers for you to read or not. Meanwhile, I will toss it to you guys for you to share your thoughts as well.
In Star Trek, meanwhile, Spock would famously say "the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few" as though it were his mantra, pushing it as a standard of logic that it is preferable to sacrifice the few to benefit the many, and to do anything else is a decision couched in emotion.
Fictional scenarios like the above repeat themselves again and again in fiction, often with it taken to the extreme of sacrificing the one to benefit all of humanity or even the entire survival of the world itself.
This is a trope we really could analyze to death. I have my thoughts on it, but I will put them in spoilers for you to read or not. Meanwhile, I will toss it to you guys for you to share your thoughts as well.
This trope harkens back to older days in which there is some form of ritual human sacrifice the hero has to rescue the sacrificial victim from. Our modern versions of it have turned it from an angry or avaricious cruel god or demented cult who's claiming the life, a clear evil that has to be fought back, to a far more morally difficult scenario of a medical disease that needs to be stopped or a non-sentient magical force that needs to be stabilized. This makes it a far more difficult question to answer, and also has the interesting side-consequence of pushing the trope into territory that is more relevant to the human experience.
On a macro-scale, do you sacrifice the one to the benefit of the many? It is a difficult question. Mr. Spock's logic would say "yes" every time, but often Captain Kirk would directly oppose this logic of Spock in order to do the right thing.
There's also a flaw in Mr. Spock's logic of the time that our society hadn't managed to grapple with and unveil until fairly recently. It is true that, in an isolated scenario, it makes logical sense to sacrifice the one to benefit the many. However, if you keep sacrificing the one over and over again throughout a large iteration of scenarios, suddenly you have created something akin to a death cult that will continuously oppress all of the individual "ones" in the group to supposedly benefit the "many." But, once all of those "many" have been sacrificed through repeated iterations of this scenario, you are not actually benefiting the "many" any more. So, you have to take a stand against this reasoning at some point, and it might as well be right at the beginning when the first "one" or "few" are about to be sacrificed on the alter of "benefiting the many."
There's also a flaw in Mr. Spock's logic of the time that our society hadn't managed to grapple with and unveil until fairly recently. It is true that, in an isolated scenario, it makes logical sense to sacrifice the one to benefit the many. However, if you keep sacrificing the one over and over again throughout a large iteration of scenarios, suddenly you have created something akin to a death cult that will continuously oppress all of the individual "ones" in the group to supposedly benefit the "many." But, once all of those "many" have been sacrificed through repeated iterations of this scenario, you are not actually benefiting the "many" any more. So, you have to take a stand against this reasoning at some point, and it might as well be right at the beginning when the first "one" or "few" are about to be sacrificed on the alter of "benefiting the many."
There is, however, one scenario where this entire trope is turned on it's head. The heroic self-sacrifice is also an iteration of the one being sacrificed to save the many. However, we often see this version of it in an entirely different light. When it is an innocent who is chosen by others to be sacrificed, that's bad. However, when someone steps up to be the sacrifice on their own terms, it becomes heroic.
This is especially the case when the hero is fighting off a clear threat than means to destroy the people standing behind them. A hero might fight to single-handedly push back a hoard of enemies, knowing they are going to die. They might throw themselves on a grenade to save their comrades. They might volunteer to donate a kidney to save someone's life. Whatever the case, the difference of voluntarily stepping up to aid others is seen as heroic, where as forced sacrifice is... considerably less so. That way of viewing things brings into perspective the major moral issue that is being called into question whenever this trope comes up.
This is especially the case when the hero is fighting off a clear threat than means to destroy the people standing behind them. A hero might fight to single-handedly push back a hoard of enemies, knowing they are going to die. They might throw themselves on a grenade to save their comrades. They might volunteer to donate a kidney to save someone's life. Whatever the case, the difference of voluntarily stepping up to aid others is seen as heroic, where as forced sacrifice is... considerably less so. That way of viewing things brings into perspective the major moral issue that is being called into question whenever this trope comes up.
With these things in mind, it might even be an interesting thing in some writing to bring up these two types of sacrificing the few to the benefit of the many. The heroic self-sacrifice Vs. the brutal imposed sacrifice. This difference of choice really frames these ideas in two separate and very different lights that we just instinctively know are different at a primal level. In terms of writing a piece that calls these concepts into question, one could bring up both scenarios and even compare them to one another.
As for what statement you make with these two scenarios, that is entirely up to the individual author. And, I am certain the audience will have their own thoughts with such a deep topic, to which an author may want to be cautioned away from making too strong a statement on this issue. But, it is a tool to allow an author to better analyze the idea and force the audience to take a better look at it as well.
As for what statement you make with these two scenarios, that is entirely up to the individual author. And, I am certain the audience will have their own thoughts with such a deep topic, to which an author may want to be cautioned away from making too strong a statement on this issue. But, it is a tool to allow an author to better analyze the idea and force the audience to take a better look at it as well.