a) ‘Motive’ just means ‘that which moves.’ That which moves the will (i.e., the intellective/rational appetite) is the good it apprehends as its end. It follows from the definition of the ‘object’ of an act that ‘object’ includes motive:
CCC 1751 “The object chosen is a good toward which the will deliberately directs itself.”
Yes, that’s right. But first I wrote: “why would anyone deny that each act as done, each particular act, includes motive and circumstances”.
You answered:
I’ll quote the catechism again:
CCC 1751 “The object chosen is a good toward which the will deliberately directs itself. It is the matter of a human act. The object chosen morally specifies the act of the will, insofar as reason recognizes and judges it to be or not to be in conformity with the true good. Objective norms of morality express the rational order of good and evil, attested to by conscience.”
Note that the object chosen already includes a consideration of motive (deliberate direction of the will towards a good) and circumstances (the particular recognition and judgment of reason).
It seems to me that you are you are equivocating “motive” to mean both that which moves the will in itself
and the end or purpose that the
actor has in mind. Motive has been used hitherto to mean “end” in the sense of the
finis operatis, not the
finis operis, right? And it seems that you are equivocating motive here because you say “the object chosen already includes a consideration of motive and circumstance”. Circumstance as a determinant of morality, by which we analyze an act, means that which is not the object. And “motive and circumstance” when used together (because they are being referred to as 2 of the three fonts of morality) are not contained in the object. Yes, the reason an actor chooses this moral object as opposed to this moral object means that the moral object has a
relation to the end and circumstances. That is why a man steals a horse and doesn’t slander a horse when he wants to ride off into the sunset. But when you consider the moral object in itself as
a kind of act it doesn’t matter why it is this moral object and not that. The kind of act, in itself, is either good, bad or neutral.
If you’d like we can start over and go again from were you take issue with o_mlly’s clarified statement that it is not true to say that the end never justifies the means.
Betterave:
b) Can you clarify? I’m not sure what you’re asking here.
Sure. Not to put too fine a point on it, but to use your own phrase: it is trivial to our discussion. Everyone chooses a true or apparent good. It is universal. So, every act of the will chooses a good. To say that the object of an act is always a true or apparent good has no bearing on o_mlly’s statment that the end doesn’t justify a means – meaning an act – the moral object of which is indifferent. Does it?
Let me again lay out the progress of this conversation:
Verbum Caro:
To put it more clearly, there can many particular acts (acts “as done”) that are of the same kind. Adultery is a kind of act. The particulars add the actor’s motive and the circumstances of the act.
Betterave:
I think you’re right. There are many particular acts which fall under the single concept ‘adultery.’ But I don’t think we have any reason to deny that each one of those acts includes motive and circumstances…
I said that adultery is a
kind of act, a
moral object. I say that particular acts, acts as done, add the
actor’s motive and circumstances. (not the “motive” that is contained in every movement of the will by every actor everywhere).
You then say that there are “many particular acts which fall under the single concept of adultery.” Fine. Then you say that we don’t have a reason to deny that each of
those acts include motives and circumstances. Of course not. Why deny it? That is what I said above, each particular act adds the motive and circumstances to the moral object (adultery).
Then you quote the catechism and say, not so, motive and circumstances are included in the moral object. That just isn’t true. The moral object “adultery” doesn’t include “while away fighting in the crusades”. Or “because my wife is cold to me”. Or “because I want to get back at my husband for selling the condo”.
Your quote from St. Thomas (by the way, I don’t think you complete the citation – it’s question 8.) just doesn’t do anything for us. The fact that every thing is good because it is a thing – goodness as a transcendental property of being – and because the will chooses a thing that has being it must choose a good – just doesn’t do much for our conversation it seems to me. “. . . everything, inasmuch as it is being and substance, is a good, it must needs be that every inclination is to something good.” (same article).
Maybe you want to talk about the" circumstances" that are
principal conditions of the moral object of the act? But we have been discussing (n.b. O_mlly’s observation about ends justifying means) the determinants of morality and motive and circumstances are not part of the object for the purposes of our discussion. Perhaps you should start another thread?
I appreciate the thought-provoking discussion,
VC