G
Godfollower
Guest
Okay, apparently I haven’t been clear.No I did not. I claim it is the lesser of two evils.
You select Choice B.
According to the above, your Choice B is immoral, since the result of the action kills more innocents.
Both Choice A and Choice B are immoral. I selected Choice A because it results in the fewer number of deaths of innocents. You choose Choice B because you consider the goodness of the object only; the result doesn’t matter. The section of Catechism you quoted is contrary to your reasoning since you are not including all factors.
Here’s the principle of double effect, which permits some actions even though they have both good and evil results:
*]The act itself must be morally good – it cannot be evil in itself;
*]The only thing that one can intend is the good act – one cannot intend the foreseen bad effect;
*]The good effect cannot arise from the bad effect – otherwise, one would do evil to achieve good; and
*]The unintended but foreseen bad effect cannot be disproportionate to the good being performed.
So let’s evaluate the two options we’ve been discussing. First, invasion:- Invading an enemy’s country in a just war is morally good (or at least neutral);
- Intending to end the war by defeating enemy combtants (while presumably not aiming at noncombatants) is acceptable;
- The good effect is ending the war, not killing the noncombatants, and it doesn’t arise from the killing of the noncombatants; and
- Accidentally (or, more probably, knowingly but regretably) killing the noncombatants is not disproportionate to ending the production of munitions.
Now let’s make the same analysis with firebombing or nuclear-bombing an entire city to force a surrender: - Indiscriminate killing of all or most people in a given area without regard to whether those people were involved in the wrongdoing you’re trying to stop is evil in itself;
- By definition in the scenarios being discussed, the killing of civilians (including those who are by definition innocent because they are not of the age of reason) is part of the intent of the action;
- The hoped-for surrender is coming from the wide-spread killing, not from the loss of a munitions factory or military base; and
- Just from reading this thread, it is obviously an open question whether the bombing would have resulted in a net loss or net gain of life.
You can’t do evil to accomplish good. So says the Catechism; so says Veritatis Splendor; so said Pope Paul VI; so says Romans 3:8.
Killing enemy soldiers in an invasion during a just war is morally permissible, even though some noncombatants will be killed. Killing innocent civilians so that the psychological effect will help force the enemy to surrender is immoral and can’t be done.
Which means that, of the two scenarios we’re discussing, there’s only one moral option. So that’s the option you have to pick.
If you choose to drop the bombs because of the numbers of deaths, then (A) you’re engaging in consequentialism, which is morally bankrupt; and (B) you’re choosing to kill innocent people because you prefer the path that comes from their deaths.
I’m not saying you get to choose either the goodness of the object or the consequences of the action; Catholic theology says you have to consider all three factors: the object, the end, and the circumstances. Only if all three are good (or at least neutral) can you choose that option. You cannot choose an option that fails all three.