B
Betterave
Guest
Okay, I’ll try to start fresh:
o’mlly:
“Most human acts are morally indifferent and are justified or not based on their intended effects – the ends do justify the means.”
VC:
“I think you’ll forgive BetterAve for taking you to task over your phrasing because I don’t think you were as clear the first time around that you were talking about morally indifferent objects of an act, i.e. acts which therefore have to take their moral quality from the intention.”
Now what is an end and what is a means? An end can be either a proximate end or a remote end (although these are not at all rigid categories). An end can be posited objectively or subjectively (not mutually exclusive), abstractly (universally) or concretely (with reference to a particular act), but it is always something that appears sub specie bonitatis.
A means, on the other hand, is not an action that may or may not be related to an end. A means is a means only insofar as it serves to achieve an end. Strictly speaking, a means is desired as good only insofar as it is referred to its end.
What does “the ends never justify the means” mean? It just means that certain means to an end are fully specified moral acts in themselves that must be evaluated as morally impermissible. The ‘negation’ of this claim that you are promoting is (correct me if I’m wrong): “the ends do justify the means (at least, sometimes - i.e., with the caveat that the ends never justify evil means… which happens to be just what the original dictum - “the ends never justify the means” - meant in the first place!).”
So far, so good? I hope! (fingers crossed)
So we have the claim: “(good) ends do justify (morally-indifferent) means” - and this means (a solecism, wouldn’t you say?): “a good end makes a morally-indifferent means to be morally permissible.” …Doesn’t it? Doesn’t it?! Or am I missing something?
o’mlly:
“Most human acts are morally indifferent and are justified or not based on their intended effects – the ends do justify the means.”
VC:
“I think you’ll forgive BetterAve for taking you to task over your phrasing because I don’t think you were as clear the first time around that you were talking about morally indifferent objects of an act, i.e. acts which therefore have to take their moral quality from the intention.”
Now what is an end and what is a means? An end can be either a proximate end or a remote end (although these are not at all rigid categories). An end can be posited objectively or subjectively (not mutually exclusive), abstractly (universally) or concretely (with reference to a particular act), but it is always something that appears sub specie bonitatis.
A means, on the other hand, is not an action that may or may not be related to an end. A means is a means only insofar as it serves to achieve an end. Strictly speaking, a means is desired as good only insofar as it is referred to its end.
What does “the ends never justify the means” mean? It just means that certain means to an end are fully specified moral acts in themselves that must be evaluated as morally impermissible. The ‘negation’ of this claim that you are promoting is (correct me if I’m wrong): “the ends do justify the means (at least, sometimes - i.e., with the caveat that the ends never justify evil means… which happens to be just what the original dictum - “the ends never justify the means” - meant in the first place!).”
So far, so good? I hope! (fingers crossed)
So we have the claim: “(good) ends do justify (morally-indifferent) means” - and this means (a solecism, wouldn’t you say?): “a good end makes a morally-indifferent means to be morally permissible.” …Doesn’t it? Doesn’t it?! Or am I missing something?