R
Roscoe_Turner
Guest
You can have an intent to murder that is parallel to the need to defend yourself. Just because you have malicious intent doesn’t mean you don’t need to defend yourself. It need not be verbalized.**The idea of moral object is one that I find spurious. It separates the morality from the act. **
That’s fine. It explains why you don’t have the skill to correctly understand the English CCC when it is ambiguous in some places.
Given that you strongly disagree with mainstream Catholic Moral Theology … what makes you think that this single, ambiguous CCC article actually backs you up when you know the CCC as a whole is based on the Moral Theology that you reject?
This seems silly and unreasonable.
Just invent your own moral theology and argue from real-world examples - lets drop the pretence that the CCC supports your rejection of mainstream Catholic Moral Theology principles.
Now to your real-world analysis that allegedly stands on its own merits…
You can have an act of self defense that is murderous
Sorry, Catholics would see this as a contradiction in terms.
If an external action (killing someone) was done with the intended purpose of saving oneself with the minimal force necessary then the complete human act is good and it is called an act of self-defence.
If in fact, only known to yourself, you truly intended to murder, then this intention/purpose almost irresistably “incarnates” itself into the visible external act as a disordered use of force far in excess of what was required. This in fact would be one of the ways in which either a jury (or my own conscience) would tell me what my true intent was. That would be called “murder” …though given the object/matter circumstances probably a lesser evil of culpable “homicide” because the attacker is not exactly an “innocent.”
Rage or emotions equivalent to “I am going to do kill you” may accompany an intent/purpose but they are not exactly the same. “I am going to kill you” sounds more like a verbalised intent/purpose and not an emotion of rage/anger. Emotions tend to be more blind and generic and we often don’t know what they mean until afterwards.
If it was the pure rage that drove the killing then, again, if the force was excessive and hence disordered then this act is more like “murder” or “culpabale homicide” but it may not be a fully moral act because of the strong emotion. We would prob still call it “culpabale homicide” but no sin may be imputable due to loss of control.
It separates the morality from the act.
I do not think you are clear in your own mind what either “an act” is or what makes it “moral.”
If I stab you while I am sleep walking… is that a human act … or just the neutral action of a human? Can people also “sleep-walk” with their eyes open during the day in a less obvious sense? If I act under very strong emotion am I really committing fully free human acts?
I do not think you have thought through your self-invented, intuitive morality very far.
The wisest minds in the Church have been doing so for 1000s of years.
If I didn’t understand my Church’s moral theology I would spend a lot of time making sure I actually understood it properly before coming out with the new wheel you are trying to invent here.
If it is choosing the lesser of two evils, it is still contrary to Catholic teaching. If emotion divorces us from culpability adultery could be defended in a similar manor.
Your jabs at me don’t strengthen your argument. I’m not inventing, just critiquing.