Basically it tells me that I have no moral blame if - say - I forget the gas on and there's a big explosion and many people die. — Agustino
It doesn't follow that the action is not immoral, since that would be simply to presuppose that morality consists in not intending evil. — Agustino
:s No, not just for myself, for everyone. I do share the idea of happiness/eudaimonia expressed in the video I linked you by Adler, namely that happiness/eudaimonia is the same for all human beings.For ourselves. Yes, we can. Because we are ethically free. Hence the value of that freedom. — Mariner
No, not just for myself, for everyone. — Agustino
Okay, first of all, I don't think this example is the same as the one I gave. It's one thing if an incident that ends up harming someone happens by accident, and another if it happens by negligence. If I leave my child on the side of the balcony while I go grab a beer from the fridge, and my child unknowingly pushes him/herself over the edge and dies, then I am morally blameworthy for that, even if I didn't intend it, because I was negligent with him or her and didn't perform my duty as a parent (by the way, this story that I told you is a true story, it happened to one of my friends' dad).I say to you, Agustino, that if you and I were building a house, and you accidentally slipped while holding an electric saw that then flew out of your hands and wounded me in some way, I would hold you responsible, but not morally responsible. I would demand nothing of you. I wouldn't say that you had committed evil. I wouldn't say that you yourself are evil. I would simply say, "It's okay, Agustino, I know you didn't intend to hurt me. I'm sorry you tripped, which caused me to be wounded. Think nothing of it." — Thorongil
To say that there are evils one can commit without intending to commit them is to understand that intention isn't the only factor at play. Yes it is a factor, a very important one, but not the only one. Why else do you think we sentence people to prison if they accidentally - say while building a house - kill a co-worker? That is a barbaric practice that we should eliminate or what?To be held morally responsible for things one doesn't intend is an inversion of justice and precisely what postmodernist leftists peddle all the time. It is to be guilty before proven innocent. To say that there are evils one can commit without intending to commit them is to make everyone a moral monster. The only logical conclusion is to isolate oneself in a grass hut, far away from the material consumption and human interaction that cannot but implicate one in evil without one intending to. That is the only way to be moral on your account. — Thorongil
If I leave my child on the side of the balcony while I go grab a beer from the fridge, and my child unknowingly pushes him/herself over the edge and dies, then I am morally blameworthy for that — Agustino
o say that there are evils one can commit without intending to commit them is to understand that intention isn't the only factor at play. Yes it is a factor, a very important one, but not the only one. Why else do you think we sentence people to prison if they accidentally - say while building a house - kill a co-worker? That is a barbaric practice that we should eliminate or what? — Agustino
Can a stone be blameworthy? Can an animal be blameworthy? Or is it only moral agents that can be blameworthy?Blameworthy — Thorongil
All the four I've listed will be relevant, some more-so than others. But you still avoided to answer my question.How do we determine which factor is the one to use to confer moral blame in a given scenario? — Thorongil
Why else do you think we sentence people to prison if they accidentally - say while building a house - kill a co-worker? That is a barbaric practice that we should eliminate or what? — Agustino
Can a stone be blameworthy? Can an animal be blameworthy? Or is it only moral agents that can be blameworthy? — Agustino
Why else do you think we sentence people to prison if they accidentally - say while building a house - kill a co-worker? That is a barbaric practice that we should eliminate or what? — Agustino
So then O:) - a stone that falls from the rooftop on someone's head has "simple" blame? :DI distinguished between moral blame, which is to assign moral responsibility, and simply blame, which is to assign causal responsibility. — Thorongil
Do you hold that there are situations when we should imprison people based on factors that are NOT also immoral in nature?This question doesn't affect my position at all, so I ignored it. I'm here to defend what I take to be moral, not what qualifies as imprisonment-worthy. — Thorongil
So then O:) - a stone that falls from the rooftop on someone's head has "simple" blame? :D — Agustino
Do you hold that there are situations when we should imprison people based on factors that are NOT also immoral in nature? — Agustino
This is a very important subject. You are aware that this is not the position of either the Roman Catholic or the Eastern Orthodox church with regards to morality right?I think there may be prudential and admonitory reasons for prison sentences in the absence of moral culpability. However, I also think such sentences can be gratuitous as forms of punishment. I would probably prefer sentences of community service or some form of charitable work instead. — Thorongil
You are aware that this is not the position of either the Roman Catholic or the Eastern Orthodox church with regards to morality right? — Agustino
There are many problems with the view that good and evil are mere matters of simple intention. For example, what if someone authentically thinks that killing you will do you good because it would send you to heaven for example? If they try and kill you, then they intend to do good (even if they're wrong) no? According to you, they have done nothing wrong (morally) by killing you, since they intended to do good. — Agustino
There is a saying out there - "the road to hell is paved with good intentions". — Agustino
If the intellect thinks X is good, then the will will pursue X. But that judgement can be mistaken, so the will can pursue evil while intending to pursue good. Thus, mere intention is not sufficient to give an account for morality. — Agustino
If the stone is as blameworthy as the individual who - by negligence - drops a hammer onto his co-worker's head, based on what considerations do we put one in prison, and we don't do anything to the other? — Agustino
https://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=1033639No. Show me. — Thorongil
Well don't you think it's possible to have a good intention, and - for example - because of lack of knowledge produce a terrible result? In that case, would your good intention (say - your desire to save someone from death) morally excuse the results you have produced?If good intentions lead one to hell, then do bad intentions lead one to heaven? If they were truly good, they couldn't lead one to hell. — Thorongil
Yeah, of course, I agree there is an objective good, HOWEVER, my point is that in striving to reach for that objective good you may fall into something that is immoral, due to various factors. That would still count as a sin.To finish it, I would add that the fact that one can be mistaken about the good doesn't mean there isn't the objectively good for one to intend. — Thorongil
Well, I started out by saying that the view with regards to morality that Thorongil expounds here is quite similar to Kantian deontological ethics, and that's not the view adopted by the Church. The Church adopts virtue ethics instead. And in virtue ethics, having good intentions isn't sufficient to be moral.Using your argument about the view of the churches doesnt prove anything? — Beebert
I think for the most part it does. Why would you say it doesn't?Correct me if I am wrong, but as far as I know, your Church does NOT adopt virtue ethics. Perhaps it does in practice, but it simply hasnt defined it. What you seem to talk about is the catholic church. — Beebert
And Plato's ethics isn't virtue ethics? :sLook at the greek fathers though. It was almost exclusively Platon that influenced them, not Aristotle. Aristotle came with Aquinas and others thanks to the arabs — Beebert
Well don't you think it's possible to have a good intention, and - for example - because of lack of knowledge produce a terrible result? — Agustino
In that case, would your good intention (say - your desire to save someone from death) morally excuse the results you have produced? — Agustino
Yeah, of course, I agree there is an objective good, HOWEVER, my point is that in striving to reach for that objective good you may fall into something that is immoral, due to various factors. That would still count as a sin. — Agustino
I think Solovyev was the most important figure but he was very much influenced by Platonism (a system of thought which includes virtue ethics).In the East, we see that the great russian religous renaissance was inspired by mainly Dostoevsky and Solovyev, but also Kant and Nietzsche(and Plato to some extent). — Beebert
It's true that the Orthodox don't speak as much about ethics or philosophy as the Cathloics, but that's not to say it isn't there.In his The Crisis of Western Philosophy: Against the Positivists, Solovyov discredited the positivists' rejection of Aristotle's essentialism, or philosophical realism. In Against the Postivists, he took the position of intuitive noetic comprehension, or insight.
http://www.newadvent.org/summa/2018.htm - especially articles 3 & 10 (circumstance/context/consequences matter)Those links don't exactly help in settling the claim you made. I would want an official church document of some kind. — Thorongil
Also, if you want the Catechism:Those links don't exactly help in settling the claim you made. I would want an official church document of some kind. — Thorongil
The morality of human acts depends on: — the object chosen; — the end in view or the intention; — the circumstances of the action. The object, the intention, and the circumstances make up the ‘sources,’ or constitutive elements, of the morality of human acts.
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