D
Dranu
Guest
This is where the main area for discussion is I think. I am quite interested to know the definition.The problem is the Church has not defined what exactly constitutes Torture
oldcatholicguy said:-Here let me give you a scenario- On a hot day a 14 year kid steals a car which happens to have a 18 month old in side. He discovers this and abandons the car with the toddler inside it. The police catch him, take him to the station, and want to know where the toddler is and the kid demands a lawyer and shuts his mouth. Well it is an emergency so the police strap him to a chair, and waterboard him until he tells them where the car is. Not torture right? Just an enhanced interrogation technique right? I mean what’s a little fake drowning when we are talking about saving an innocent life.
Putting aside the legal issues, in trying to figure out a definition of torture there is something of interest that distinguishes this and dealing with most modern terrorists:
1.) It is very likely that your stereotypical Muslim terrorist feels morally obligated to withhold information the ‘interrogator’ is trying to obtain by water boarding, on extreme pain of their conscience.
2.) It is very unlikely that the 14 year old kid feels morally obligated to withhold information from the ‘interrogator’.
Is it possible that ‘torture’ (the thing that is wrong) is the compulsion by agony to try and force one to act contrary to personal conscience? Maybe instead it is** the compulsion by agony to try and force one to act contrary to right conscience **? I tend to be okay with the idea of interrogating with pain a sadistic kidnapper to find out where he left a victim, for the very reason that you are not compelling him to act against his conscience and I see nothing wrong with the mere infliction of extreme pain. Likewise, the infliction of severe pain on certain guilty criminals for a purely punitive purpose does not seem immoral (Christ even seems to allude to this in the parable of the unforgiving servant with a debt).
At any rate, whatever the definition may be, it would be absurd to think the definition of torture is* the infliction of extreme pain*. If that were the case, many things that are obviously moral would be intrinsically wrong (e.g. certain medical procedures, just war, self-defense, going to law school