Curiously, I don't think the article actually goes on to explain much about the issue the author has with the actual trolley problem. Instead, he gives examples of other thought experiments which have, I think, some obvious problems.
And at the end of the article he says:
Overall, ethical thought experiments are, at best, fallible ways of constructing simplified models that map rather imperfectly onto the world as we experience it, and can distort as much as they illuminate. So should we give up on them as sources of ethical insight?and answers that with (in my paraphrase) "no, we just have to be careful how we use them."
Well, that's kind of obvious, isn't it?
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