It is an interesting question.
I would like to say that I would. I believe that human life is endlessly valuable, so giving up my well-being for a stranger's life is something that, ideally, I would be willing to do. But I admit, I'm not sure how I would act were I put in that situation.
For someone I know, like family member or my girlfriend? Absolutely. It's a wrong and biased distinction, but I'm looking at it realistically: the value of human life is intrinsic, so none of my family members are somehow "worth more" than a random person on the street, but my emotional connection to them would undoubtedly make me jump into action much more easily than with someone I don't know.
So in short, I would ideally put my own well-being at risk to save another. However, without actually being in that situation, I can't guarantee that I would unless I had an emotional connection to the person. It's a hard question to handle theoretically, and is never truly answered until put into practice.
I would like to say that I would. I believe that human life is endlessly valuable, so giving up my well-being for a stranger's life is something that, ideally, I would be willing to do. But I admit, I'm not sure how I would act were I put in that situation.
For someone I know, like family member or my girlfriend? Absolutely. It's a wrong and biased distinction, but I'm looking at it realistically: the value of human life is intrinsic, so none of my family members are somehow "worth more" than a random person on the street, but my emotional connection to them would undoubtedly make me jump into action much more easily than with someone I don't know.
So in short, I would ideally put my own well-being at risk to save another. However, without actually being in that situation, I can't guarantee that I would unless I had an emotional connection to the person. It's a hard question to handle theoretically, and is never truly answered until put into practice.