Please, read the CCC 1756. An act can be intrinsically evil because its moral object is intrinsically evil. What is the intrinsically evil moral object of a murder?
OK, so the terminology I learned is: Acts can be “intrinsically evil” (subject to moral object). Moral objects are “good” or “evil”. Evil moral object means “intrinsically evil” Act. Acts with a good moral object may be Moral or Immoral depending on Intentions / Circumstances
You quote from the CCC - sometimes to support your argument, sometimes to say it is wrong!! So, I’m really wondering - is there any source on this subject that I can look at that “gets it right” in your view?
Anyway - I think where we differ here is around words and definitions. What is the moral object of
"the direct, voluntary killing of innocent individuals". Don’t tell me it’s “killing”

The moral object of such an act is the moral evil of murder. And yep, all specific acts, described as above, are called murder. But it’s enough to recognise the moral object as Evil -
we don’t have to name it, but choosing a name badly can create confusion (which is what I think you’re doing). And the word “killing” is a case in point - it fails to address the “will” of the actor.
An act that involved one person killing another cant be said to be an intrinsically evil act. We don’t have half the story. Was it on purpose?
Correct, that’s why I said there is a first stage of act analysis. The intentions, circumstances, consequences, … are inseparable in this stage in order to determine what is the moral object, in other words if killing is a moral object or it is a consequence of an accident, …
OK, so I say that is wrong, but I think I might know why you say it. You’re thinking like a police detective investigating…because you can’t get inside the suspect’s mind - you can’t know his Will, so you have to ask all about “motives” and “opportunity” etc and from that, you’re gonna try and decide can you do a Hercule Poirot and blurt out **“ahaa, so it was murder!” **
But we’re talking about morality. It “exists” independent of what anyone else can see. What did LongingSoul say - you need the “eyes of the human conscience” to see the moral object. The CCC is a book for the “actors” (and their consciences), not the police detectives!
“On purpose” means the killing is a moral object. “Not on purpose” means the killing is a consequence; but it also means there HAS to be another moral object.
That’s funny language!! “Killing on purpose” describes an Act with
an evil moral object, which is what really matters (let’s not even give it a name for now). “Killing not on purpose” implies
a different Act!
Once the identification is done; we know what is what, what are the intentions, what is the moral object, what are the circumstances, consequences then the second stage of analysis can take place. If we end up with the moral object that is -]intrinsically /-]evil then the act is intrinsically evil. So for CCC 1756 to say that an act is intrinsically evil because its object is -]intrinsically /-]evil and the intentions and circumstances can not change that is a false statement… because without knowing intentions and circumstances
, … in the first stage of analysis there would be no moral object in the second stage.
Hey, you are denying the exact **principle ** which the CCC is asserting! The principle that tells you that you can’t murder, commit adultery, etc.
regardless of Intention. What you’re saying (“intrinsically”

) is that “the Ends may justify the Means” -
we just need to check out the Intention to decide! It’s a nice theory, because, so long as there’s an indisputably good End in mind, it will be possible to do anything! You’ll just set the moral object accordingly!
And the evidence of that is in your analysis of the Metho injection scenario - on hearing that the mum has ectopic, you decide that the moral object is Good (save her), whereas if she just wanted not to have another baby, you’d say the moral object is Evil.
That looks utilitarian to me - it abandons morality & is self-serving
Injection is evil in this case but it’s a consequence, it’s not a moral object.
I assume you meant the “Death of person” (not the injection…) is a consequence??? but anyway - I think you’re ducking the question. What outcome was the metho injection WILLING,
by its nature?. And what is the Intention?
Choose Metho → Baby Dies → Mum Recovers
You can’t pretend the “killing” (your word) is ONLY a consequence, when that’s the thing that produced the good outcome you’re after!! [Therefore, you must have **wanted to kill.]
In another post, you said the moral object of the act of metho injection is “save mum’s life”. That’s utilitarian and goes directly against
1759 “An evil action cannot be justified by reference to a good intention” (cf. St. Thomas Aquinas, Dec. praec. 6). The end does not justify the means.
and also this (which I lifted from another CAF thread):
Murder is defined by the Magisterium (Evangelium Vitae n. 57):
"Therefore, … I confirm that the direct and voluntary killing of an innocent human being is always gravely immoral…
“The deliberate decision to deprive an innocent human being of his life is always morally evil and can never be licit either as an end in itself or as a means to a good end. It is in fact a grave act of disobedience to the moral law, and indeed to God himself, the author and guarantor of that law; it contradicts the fundamental virtues of justice and charity.”
See the Red - the Intentions and Circumstances are not needed.