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Georgeoflyyda
Guest
Okay, so I am a philosophy major, which mean’s I get to think for a major, which I love already. I was talking with my Professor about Kantism and Utilitarianism, and he described Utilitarianism as thus: Essentially, whatever provides the most pleasure is what is the most morally correct. Now the question was: well, what about hurting one person for the many. He answered that if there were 3 people, dying and each needed an organ transplant, and there is one homeless man who could be sacrificed for the three, the answer to this dilemma is that in fact, the emotional trauma of watching a man die would make it clear that no, killing the man wouldn’t be moral, basically he argued that such immoral events would, in fact, hurt many people beyond the four involved. Now assuming that’s all true, that we are not conditioned to look at murder as wrong and thus why we react badly to it mentally, that we can’t become indifferent to it, is that at all compatible with Catholicism? I’m all in favor of ignoring Utilitarianism and staying with what the Church says, but just in theory, are they opposites, I know Pope Francis has condemned Utilitarianism but doesn’t he oppose the Hedonism? Hedonism is selfish, what my Professor described hardly seemed selfish or unfair to the homeless man. Personally, what I am thinking right now, it’s a secular re-hash of Christian Ethics, and if it is true, all it goes to show is the Church is as always, right.
Saint Thomas Aquinas, Divine Doctor and Saint of Students, pray for me and all Catholic Students.
Saint Thomas Aquinas, Divine Doctor and Saint of Students, pray for me and all Catholic Students.