I’ve been hearing and reading debates about the old (1884) criminal case The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens since law school, and I must say, I’m a bit sick of it.
A wealthy lawyer from Australia purchased bought a yacht named the Mignonette and hired a Captain Dudley to sail it to him it from England. Dudley and his three crew members encountered a violent a storm off the coast of Africa, and the Mignonette was swamped. Its captain and crew escaped in a lifeboat with minimal provisions. After more than three weeks adrift, the captain decided that all of them would die of hunger and thirst unless extreme measures were taken, so he took them. He decided that cabin boy Richard Parker, a 17-year-old orphan, should be slaughtered and eaten. The captain’s reasoning: Parker was already delirious from drinking seawater, so he was deemed the weakest and least likely to survive anyway. The three men killed to boy, collected his blood in a bailer and drank it, then removed his heart and liver and ate them.
It worked! They were rescued in time, just a few days later in fact. Dudley and the First Mate Edwin Stephens were also prosecuted and found guilty of murder, a result that was considered revolutionary, since resorting to cannibalism in such dire circumstances was considered a normal course of action, “the custom of the sea.” In the U.S. at the time, the courts widely accepted the “necessity doctrine,” which excuses some illegal acts if they are performed in good faith to prevent a greater harm.

Even more dire, they could see just on the beach within swimming distance was an Arby’s.
I would still choose the sick cabin boy….
would it be unethical for the cabin boy to oppose your Option 3?
can he oppose it by force?
Deadly force?
I don’t think 3 gets you out of the problem.
-Jut
Sorry, cannibalism is one of my bright lines. The survival of anyone in the lifeboat is already moral luck. Mere survival is not enough. Seeing England again is not enough. How are the survivors going to return to a society that doesn’t allow cannibalism? Society could turn a blind eye to what happened, but how would anyone individually interact with someone who at seventh and last killed and ate another?
In short, the murder is not the issue, the cannibalism is. There are some things a civilized man should NOT do…
I don’t know. I think the murder is the issue. You are right they are surviving on pure luck at this point. But murder to increase your luck? Nope.
Once one dies? Maybe you’re all too far gone to take advantage but maybe you aren’t. And then cannibalism is a horrible but tolerable thing at that point.