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Man, don't you love being a slimy, greasy manipulator?
Evil isn't about your experience once you are dead. Evil is about depriving others of the actions of their life.
Good and evil are actually absolute. We just live in societies that have engaged in a lot of circuitous philosophical questionings about biological stuff that's actually quite obvious. Go out on the street and bash a random passerby in the head with a hammer. See if you are not incarcerated and maybe even executed as evil.See if you are not shot dead for attempting to commit evil.
If there is no sensation after death,
These groups, the biggest of which are many world religions (Christianity, Islam, Buddhism all do not see death as an evil), very often approach death from a positive perspective, seeing the passing of their friends and family as personally regrettable but nonetheless better for the late person.
Is it acceptable to, barring societal effects, kill a man to use his organs to save two people?
What about five, or ten?
For example, what should we do with a murderer who killed an innocent? Even in your scenario, people will disagree as to whether I, after killing some rando, would be "incarcerated" or "executed as evil". You said it yourself.
I'm sorry, but when I hear somebody refer to moral questions as "quite obvious", I'm inclined to think that they haven't done much philosophy in their time.
They're [world religions] all lying to themselves and their societies as a matter of Terror Management.
Nope. It's not acceptable to lynch a black man to serve the emotional whims of 2 white men either. Did you have an actual question worth asking here?
In this respect, your medical question is exactly the same thing [as lynching of a single man to satisfy a town]. Someone 'must' die to 'save' others.This is Evil. Capital 'E'. And it's absolute.It does not change no matter the scale. Jews or Tutsis, doesn't matter.
This isn't that interesting. Standards of law, and getting people to agree on whether a given event met a standard of law, are different problems. We can most certainly execute people who murdered someone innocent, under various circumstances. Will we? That depends on a legal process.
I have a history of objecting to philosophical abstractions, very much preferring concrete reasoning with real world examples to provide context. Many of these philosophical moral dilemmas, are contrivances, where the contrivance itself seeks to authorize limited options. Using contrivances as a means to authority, doesn't fool me.