Suudy
Active member
I initially posted on the Ask an Apologist forum this question (see forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=92282), but I wanted to explore it further with everyone else was well. While the reference to Jimmy Akin’s article was useful, it didn’t get down to the nitty-gritty that I’m looking for.
I was in a discussion over the holidays with a friend regarding moral relativism. He’s a big supporter of the concept that we each define our own truths. I objected saying that there are objective truths that exist, such as the prohibition on murder. Surpisingly, he agreed, but he and I disagreed on what murder is.
He has strictly defined it as the intentional killing of any person, regardless of circumstances. Now the Catechism (para 2310) indicates that the state can raise, maintain, and use a military provided that the conditions for the war are just. The question that comes up is are those combatants that kill in that war committing murder?
I would suggest that they are not, since the war is itself just, so objectively speaking, it is not murder.
Similarly in the case of capital punishment. Assuming the restrictions in the Catechism (para 2267) for the death penalty are met (which should be very, very rare), is the executioner (or executioners) committing murder?
Again, I would suggest this is not murder.
I took this approach with my friend saying that there is a distinction between murder and killing, and that killing in a just war and being the executioner in a just application of the death penalty is not murder.
So we expand this to an unjust war or unjust application of the death penalty. Is killing in these situations murder? Can a person, in good faith, participate in a military action that they and their leaders believe is just, but is in fact objectively unjust? Are they committing murder?
If it is not murder, then we are caught in the conundrum of moral relativity. If the person believes the war is just, then killing within that war is not murder. We are back at square one in my argument with my friend.
I’m confident that there are objective truths, and that the prohibition on murder is one of those. But given the above reasoning we went through, it almost appears there isn’t objective truth (at least in the case of murder). Certainly there is a problem in our argument, and I’d love to get some thoughtful responses to it.
Any takers?
I was in a discussion over the holidays with a friend regarding moral relativism. He’s a big supporter of the concept that we each define our own truths. I objected saying that there are objective truths that exist, such as the prohibition on murder. Surpisingly, he agreed, but he and I disagreed on what murder is.
He has strictly defined it as the intentional killing of any person, regardless of circumstances. Now the Catechism (para 2310) indicates that the state can raise, maintain, and use a military provided that the conditions for the war are just. The question that comes up is are those combatants that kill in that war committing murder?
I would suggest that they are not, since the war is itself just, so objectively speaking, it is not murder.
Similarly in the case of capital punishment. Assuming the restrictions in the Catechism (para 2267) for the death penalty are met (which should be very, very rare), is the executioner (or executioners) committing murder?
Again, I would suggest this is not murder.
I took this approach with my friend saying that there is a distinction between murder and killing, and that killing in a just war and being the executioner in a just application of the death penalty is not murder.
So we expand this to an unjust war or unjust application of the death penalty. Is killing in these situations murder? Can a person, in good faith, participate in a military action that they and their leaders believe is just, but is in fact objectively unjust? Are they committing murder?
If it is not murder, then we are caught in the conundrum of moral relativity. If the person believes the war is just, then killing within that war is not murder. We are back at square one in my argument with my friend.
I’m confident that there are objective truths, and that the prohibition on murder is one of those. But given the above reasoning we went through, it almost appears there isn’t objective truth (at least in the case of murder). Certainly there is a problem in our argument, and I’d love to get some thoughtful responses to it.
Any takers?