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Nevarlander
Guest
What is someone’s moral responsibility for evil acts committed under coercion? The specific instance I had in mind was a child adopted out around eight or nine who was then raised to believe that adherence to his new parents’ non-religious (morally neutral) ideology, and personal loyalty to his new father (who had thrown his own moral compass off the boat thirty years ago), were the only virtues that counted. He was rather a trusting child (abandonment issues etc. D
, so of course internalized these, and did quite a few unpleasant things believing that they were right. Given, I know that the natural law is written on man’s heart, but when someone else does his best to erase it like that, how much is one’s culpability lessened?
Also, because everything on Moral Theology is about sex
, and because it’s related to the first question, is there any responsibility accrued to someone who consents to sexual activity that is not definitely rape (no force or grave fear involved, complies because of coercion coming from an authority/emotional abuse)? I don’t mean children for this question, but teenagers and adults. (Don’t bring in Maria Goretti on this one, that was both heroic virtue and inapplicable to what I’m asking.)
Also, because everything on Moral Theology is about sex