I have a longer list for you courtesy of the Catechism, Veritatis Splendor, St. Paul, Augustine, St. Thomas and Jimmy Akin.
Fornication
Lying
Calumny
Condemning an innocent person
Immorality
Idolatry
Adultery
Sexual perversion
Theft
Greed
Drunkenness
Reviling
Robbery
Blasphemy
Any kind of homicide
Genocide
Abortion
Euthanasia
Voluntary suicide
Mutilation
Torments inflicted on the body or mind
Attempts to coerce the spirit
Subhuman living conditions
Arbitrary imprisonment
Deportation
Slavery
Prostitution
Trafficking in women and children
Degrading conditions of work which treat labourers as mere instruments of profit, and not as free responsible persons
There is no such agreement that intrinsically evil acts are those acts where no possible motive or circumstance could possibly mitigate the evil. That notion is not accepted by any of the parties named above.
Notice, too,
Blue Horizon, that mutilation is included on the list but is only considered intrinsically evil given the evil intentions of the one committing the mutilation, but evil nonetheless.
To be clear, as
Jimmy Akin points out in this article intrinsic evil acts are only those that do bear out as determinably evil after considerations of evil motive and inexcusable circumstance have been included in the account.
In other words, mutilation is intrinsically evil if physical harm is done to the body of another with intent to cause that harm and not for any other motive. However, mutilation would still be considered
evil in the sense of harming the normal functioning of a human body, which was my point in the first place.
Bringing up “intrinsic evil” is merely to state that there are some evils that would not be excused under some circumstances and for some reasons. That seems irrelevant to my initial point that a surgeon is doing evil, i.e., causing harm, to the patient, although, to abide by your definition, it isn’t “intrinsically evil” meaning it is “excusably evil,” which adds nothing to the conversation, except that the doctor is doing an excusable evil and not an intrinsic evil after all.
However, that does nothing to support your contention, Blue Horizon, that “Neither should we believe that the Church teaches we may choose the lesser of two evils.” In fact, what you mean is that the Church teaches we should never commit an “intrinsic evil,” which is not the same as never choosing the lesser of two evils, unless you insist that all evils are “intrinsically” so. That will be a difficult notion to accept.
By the way, impugning a lack of a calm disposition, an unclear and prejudiced mind to another poster based on nothing but words on a page would seem a bit odd, given you have no idea concerning my disposition from letters typed in a text field. “Prejudiced” and unclear would seem to reduce to “disagree with Blue Horizon” and “see things differently,” but good on you to not jump to conclusions about me.
Furthermore, Mr. Akin argues against your point specifically in the article…
He then goes on to specifically address a number of the “intrinsic evils” on the list and why they appear on it, even though they are not “intrinsically evil” because they cannot be excused but only after they have not been. Big difference.