The footbridge case is a variation of the trolley problem, but it changes the moral weight. Instead of pulling a lever to redirect a trolley, you stand on a bridge next to a large stranger. If you push him off the bridge, his body will stop the trolley and save five people. Should you do it?
TST Ethics starts with its recipe:
Group ethics guides. Personal morality chooses. Act with good intent. Weigh the result. Adjust.
To answer clearly, skip ahead to a harsher version of the same moral shape: if one healthy person could be killed and their organs harvested to save five dying people, why not? Shouldn’t hospitals be picking up people off the streets every day, killing them to harvest their organs? The numbers are clear!
Here, group ethics shows the light. Few of us want to live in a world where society can kill a healthy person to save others. The rule would be monstrous. It would destroy trust and violate dignity.
That guiding light helps us return to the footbridge case. Pushing the person off the bridge uses an innocent person as the tool to solve a problem. That is different from pulling a lever and redirecting a threat already in motion.
So, from the group ethics layer, the guidance is clearly not to push. Saving five lives is a powerful result, but the act itself violates the kind of world we can safely share. The footbridge case shows why ethics cannot be reduced to numbers alone.
In the end, personal morality still has to choose. In real life, panic, uncertainty, and impossible pressure matter. But in the clean thought experiment, the guidance is clearer than the classic trolley case: do not push.