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achieve justified ends. If war is recognized as intrinsically evil, then the deliberate choice of war could not be justified in the way that just war theory attempts to do. Take for comparison how torture of human beings is intrinsically evil. There is consequently no “just torture the-ory” to distinguish between torturing justly and ...
- David K. Chan
- 2012
Oct 27, 2023 · At first glance, Lee's words seem to imply that war is a necessary evil, a horrific ordeal that serves as a deterrent to our innate attraction to it. In essence, he suggests that the dreadful nature of war prevents us from becoming enamored with its inherent brutality and destructive force.This quote holds significant historical relevance, as it embodies the mindset of military leaders during ...
Kant's theory of evil is typically discussed in terms of its success or failure to explain problems of moral motivation within individuals. But this focus on the individual overlooks the centrality of the collectivity for Kant's analysis. of evil. When he wrote of the human being as good or evil, he meant not.
The ethics of war in the just war tradition is one that takes war to be morally neutral in itself. 1 War could be justified if certain conditions were met, and war could be chosen as a morally acceptable means to achieve justified ends. If war is recognized as intrinsically evil, then the deliberate choice of war could not be justified in the ...
- David K. Chan
- 2012
Jul 21, 2014 · The just war tradition (or just war theory) is one subset of military ethics. [2] Recently, interest in just war theory was ignited by Michael Walzer’s 1977 Just and Unjust Wars, published in the wake of the Vietnam War. More recently, profound challenges to “traditional” just war theory—under the banner of “revisionism”—have ...
Aug 15, 2017 · War: An Equiry by A. C. Grayling. Yale University Press, 288p, $26. A. C. Grayling’s three chapters on the history of war lead to the question of what causes war, an exploration not of the ...
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Citing Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Elshtain argues that the civilized world’s reaction to barbarism must be to chart a course between “corrupt inaction and action motivated by revenge.”. Michael Ignatieff’s The Lesser Evil offers a provocative complement to Elshtain’s primer on the application of just war theory to terrorism.