An example would be a version of the trolley problem where you can either allow the track to remain on its current path which is empty, or divert it to harm an individual unnecessarily. This is a choice between a universally good outcome or a universally bad outcome.
Whereas the typical trolley problem is an ethical dilemma since both options are harmful and neither are ideal so it’s choosing between 2 bad outcomes.
Obvious choice.
Self evident choice.
Unequivocal choice
Moral/ethical imperative.
That describes whichever of the 2 options is morally correct more than the situation in which there is a clear correct option, doesn’t it?
Maybe just an ethical lemma.
This is right. Di-lemma literally means two-options.
Lemma means one option.
Straightforward
The right thing.
Do you have an example?
Don’t want to start an applied ethics debate so that’s why I used the modified trolley problem example
I always thought there should be an opposite word for dilemma, since dealing with a choice between two equally positive outcomes happens often in life.
A unilemma? Monolemma?
A vevalemma. Vevaios is Greek for certain.