W
wussup
Guest
I have long wondered at the motivation of Mother Theresa. Having said that, I make no judgment of her per se, but the generation of the question of why. Why did Mother Theresa do the humanitarian works? More importantly, what was the moral character of the work itself?
Clearly, on the outside looking in, her work was good. Your Catholics, you can fill in the gap. The entire world viewed her as a saint. The question from a faith-based view is, was her actions morally good? I see four main moral motivators varying in degrees of ‘goodness’.
A- The act was done because the being wanted to do so in spite of the nature of the beings attributes free of compulsion from within and with-out.
B- The act was done because the being was compelled to do so from the nature of the beings attributes.
C- The act was done because the being was compelled to do so by an outside influence (be it a Supreme Being, societal pressures, physical or emotional coersion
I think the latter can be further subdivided into types:
Clearly, any action performed will have a mix of the motivators, however does it not make sense that a moral action of A is the highest moral good? For example, God created mankind because he wanted to. He was not compelled to by His nature, but rather as an expression of perfect free will.
A-Mother Theresa could have saw the misery around her in Calcutta, and wanted to serve.
B-She could have done so because it was in her nature to serve, and her action was not wholly of her own free will. Think motherly instinct. (though that is not the right word either).
C-She could have felt it a commandment. (While this appears to be the case from her statement, “I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them. It was an order. To fail would have been to break the faith”, , Joan Graff Clucas, Mother Teresa, I believe she did so mostly free of constraint.
)
This question was brought to my mind when I stumbled across notes on Kierkegard’s Concluding Unscientific Postscript, he suggests the highest moral action is which the active faith is internalized to the point that ‘objective uncertainty’ is the prime directive.
PLEASE NOTE: This is not a question of Mother Theresa, but rather an application of general interest in ethics. Personally, I believe Mother Theresa did her works because she wanted to. She weighed the options of her life, so there was a need, decided of her own free will she would do this. She therefore epitomized virtue.
Clearly, on the outside looking in, her work was good. Your Catholics, you can fill in the gap. The entire world viewed her as a saint. The question from a faith-based view is, was her actions morally good? I see four main moral motivators varying in degrees of ‘goodness’.
A- The act was done because the being wanted to do so in spite of the nature of the beings attributes free of compulsion from within and with-out.
B- The act was done because the being was compelled to do so from the nature of the beings attributes.
C- The act was done because the being was compelled to do so by an outside influence (be it a Supreme Being, societal pressures, physical or emotional coersion
I think the latter can be further subdivided into types:
c1- a desire for reward
c2- fear of punishment
c3- obedience to a higher moral authority
c2- fear of punishment
c3- obedience to a higher moral authority
Clearly, any action performed will have a mix of the motivators, however does it not make sense that a moral action of A is the highest moral good? For example, God created mankind because he wanted to. He was not compelled to by His nature, but rather as an expression of perfect free will.
A-Mother Theresa could have saw the misery around her in Calcutta, and wanted to serve.
B-She could have done so because it was in her nature to serve, and her action was not wholly of her own free will. Think motherly instinct. (though that is not the right word either).
C-She could have felt it a commandment. (While this appears to be the case from her statement, “I was to leave the convent and help the poor while living among them. It was an order. To fail would have been to break the faith”, , Joan Graff Clucas, Mother Teresa, I believe she did so mostly free of constraint.
)
This question was brought to my mind when I stumbled across notes on Kierkegard’s Concluding Unscientific Postscript, he suggests the highest moral action is which the active faith is internalized to the point that ‘objective uncertainty’ is the prime directive.
PLEASE NOTE: This is not a question of Mother Theresa, but rather an application of general interest in ethics. Personally, I believe Mother Theresa did her works because she wanted to. She weighed the options of her life, so there was a need, decided of her own free will she would do this. She therefore epitomized virtue.