What I cannot understand is how you can assert that an act can be both intrinsically evil and yet contain exceptions when it is the nature of an intrinsic evil that it has no exceptions at all.
Now I know what Alice felt like when talking with Humpty Dumpty. He too believed a word “means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.” Your position is based on your own definitions which have little in common with the way the church understands things.
Although you have focused solely on self defense, let me point out that “state” killings are still killings and are therefore also exceptions to the prohibition against killing. As I said, inasmuch as there are exceptions, killing is not intrinsically evil (as the church uses the term).
Ender
Post #324.
Nor are we aided significantly if the 5th bans us from killing the innocent (murder)…that would self evidently always be wrong by reason of the word innocent.
So what I am observing is that the alleged “intrinsic evil” is often just a word play for some contributors. A mere playing with words that allegedly well symbolise the reality actually under discussion when in fact they do not.
These sorts of word games that say murder is intrinsically evil…do not actually help much in deciding whether an objective physical evil incurred (someone is dead at the hands of another) is a moral evil done.
Such intrinsic evil assertions do not tell us if this taking the property of another is actually stealing, this killing actually murder, this irregular marriage actually the adultery meant in the 6th.
In short the words “steal”, “murder” “adultery” all by definition, for some contributors, describe intentionally illicit behaviors. They are by their definition then, always intrinsically evil.
But what if they were better translated using the word kill rather than murder…whence the intrinsic evil? I suggest the intrinsic evil can then be re-found by closely reading the CCC.
We then discover that the CCC appears to assert that all direct killings are immoral…even by the State. Lethal self defence and State killings may validly be viewed as indirect killings and therefore not contradicting the Commandment.
What then for the meaning of “adultery” in the 6th Commandment? Is it always immoral by the very definition of the word itself (like murder)…or is the evil referred to merely physical
(like killing)? I suggest it is to be understood similar to kill rather than to murder.
Whence then the immoral intrinsicality? Well, similarly by directly intending the temporal evils that result from such behaviour. Like killing, can there be indirect adulterers that do not contradict the 6th Commandment?
Well, that is what is under debate. If there can be then the Commandment is not violated, just as marines do not violate the 5th. Pope Francis doesn’t see the Commandment being violated. Nor do I in the sort of cases he and even Jesus suggested.
Ender I am not going to relitigate with you whether State killings can be directly intended or not. That topic was endlessly debated with you by myself and others last year and I have not seen reason to change my negative stance on that since then.
You are free not to agree with my above view but I believe it consistent and acceptably Catholic at the moment…just as contributors are free to believe either way re Mary’s death.
Given that Pope Francis believes some adulterers may receive Communion despite the 6th Commandment…I have a reasonable chance of being on the side of the angels here.