I was hoping for a thorough discussion of utilitarianism (yes, there's an entire philosophical school of thought on this subject), but I'm only seeing two word replies. I'm a little disappointed. If all you can say is "no" to the OP, then you haven't really considered the philosophy. The thing about utilitarianism, is that YOU can define what the ends are, and only then if the means justify the cost.
Is it right to kill a man to save another man? You can decide the standard. Maybe the guy that dies never really contributed to society, while the other man supports a family. Social utility defines the worth of a life, Maybe you're actually saving two people (or more). Quantity of life is paramount. Maybe it's never justified to trade a life for another, and the only ethical solution is to find a way to save both men.
Neat thing about philosophy, is that the answer is only as correct as it is consistent. If you have a consistent and logically coherent argument, it's a sound philosophy. So run with it. Just don't go straw man, or slippery slope and extend it to some ridiculous extent.
I always thought the means does not justify what you get in the end until I read a story from India. They caught 3 suspected Pakistani terrorists. None would talk to the police. They pulled a gun and blew one guys head off. The other two sang like canaries. They found the bomb about 10 minutes before it went off in a packed train station and diffused it.
Now, I don't know.
Link?
Even if true, the cold blooded murder of suspects by police officers is never justified whatever the outcome. In that circumstance, the end did not justify the means. You ask how else would it have been stopped? It wouldn't. The attack isn't preventable by legal and moral means, then it isn't preventable. Becoming your enemy does not defeat him.
Our police service and our intelligence agencies can work in very high pressure environments. They can perform actions which might offend our sense of right and wrong, but they have the responsibilty of our welfare weighing down on them.
Enlisted person spoke about the killing of a suspected terrorist by the police service to try to influence the terrorist's associates. In this case, the police had to get the information they needed as quickly as possible. Their strategy seemed to work, and a disaster was avoided.
So what should happen to the police officer who pulled the trigger? He might have killed one person, but you could argue that he saved hundreds. The Madrid bombing killed 191 people.
Our police service and our intelligence agencies can work in very high pressure environments. They can perform actions which might offend our sense of right and wrong, but they have the responsibilty of our welfare weighing down on them.
Enlisted person spoke about the killing of a suspected terrorist by the police service to try to influence the terrorist's associates. In this case, the police had to get the information they needed as quickly as possible. Their strategy seemed to work, and a disaster was avoided.
So what should happen to the police officer who pulled the trigger? He might have killed one person, but you could argue that he saved hundreds. The Madrid bombing killed 191 people.
Depends whether what he did was legally sanctioned or not.
Of course the ends can justify the means. If your end goal is getting an apple and your means is going to the supermarket and buying it, then the ends justifies the means.
But the question is usually asked in reference to doing something immoral or illegal or contradictory to one's one moral code in order to achieve something that is supposedly so important that it must be done at any cost. For example, if the end goal is to defend freedom and equality in America, is it justified to ban the Nazi party? In that sense, the answer is no-- the ends cannot justify the means, because the means are the ends.
I always thought the means does not justify what you get in the end until I read a story from India. They caught 3 suspected Pakistani terrorists. None would talk to the police. They pulled a gun and blew one guys head off. The other two sang like canaries. They found the bomb about 10 minutes before it went off in a packed train station and diffused it.
Now, I don't know.
Our police service and our intelligence agencies can work in very high pressure environments. They can perform actions which might offend our sense of right and wrong, but they have the responsibilty of our welfare weighing down on them.
Enlisted person spoke about the killing of a suspected terrorist by the police service to try to influence the terrorist's associates. In this case, the police had to get the information they needed as quickly as possible. Their strategy seemed to work, and a disaster was avoided.
So what should happen to the police officer who pulled the trigger? He might have killed one person, but you could argue that he saved hundreds. The Madrid bombing killed 191 people.
Depends whether what he did was legally sanctioned or not.
So whether or not he did the moral thing or not is dependent upon laws created by the government? I would argue that morality has nothing to do with the law. Saving hundreds of people in exchange for the life of one terrorist who is trying to kill them is the right thing to do regardless of the law.
I was hoping for a thorough discussion of utilitarianism (yes, there's an entire philosophical school of thought on this subject), but I'm only seeing two word replies. I'm a little disappointed. If all you can say is "no" to the OP, then you haven't really considered the philosophy. The thing about utilitarianism, is that YOU can define what the ends are, and only then if the means justify the cost.
Is it right to kill a man to save another man? You can decide the standard. Maybe the guy that dies never really contributed to society, while the other man supports a family. Social utility defines the worth of a life, Maybe you're actually saving two people (or more). Quantity of life is paramount. Maybe it's never justified to trade a life for another, and the only ethical solution is to find a way to save both men.
Neat thing about philosophy, is that the answer is only as correct as it is consistent. If you have a consistent and logically coherent argument, it's a sound philosophy. So run with it. Just don't go straw man, or slippery slope and extend it to some ridiculous extent.
I always thought the means does not justify what you get in the end until I read a story from India. They caught 3 suspected Pakistani terrorists. None would talk to the police. They pulled a gun and blew one guys head off. The other two sang like canaries. They found the bomb about 10 minutes before it went off in a packed train station and diffused it.
Now, I don't know.
Link?
Even if true, the cold blooded murder of suspects by police officers is never justified whatever the outcome. In that circumstance, the end did not justify the means. You ask how else would it have been stopped? It wouldn't. The attack isn't preventable by legal and moral means, then it isn't preventable. Becoming your enemy does not defeat him.
About six years ago a man in Germany abducted an 11 year old child, and he wanted a ransom from the family. When the man collected the ransom the police arrested him.
In custody the man refused to cooperate with the police. He actually gave misleading information. The police were anxious to find the child, so one of the officers explained to the man that they were going to torture him, and they were going to continue to torture him until he helped them.
This threat was enough for the man to provide the police with the information they needed.
I think if you try to put yourself in the position the police officers were in, and you decide that you would have done the same thing, then you're admitting that there really is nothing intrinsically wrong with torture. It just depends on the circumstances.
Our police service and our intelligence agencies can work in very high pressure environments. They can perform actions which might offend our sense of right and wrong, but they have the responsibilty of our welfare weighing down on them.
Enlisted person spoke about the killing of a suspected terrorist by the police service to try to influence the terrorist's associates. In this case, the police had to get the information they needed as quickly as possible. Their strategy seemed to work, and a disaster was avoided.
So what should happen to the police officer who pulled the trigger? He might have killed one person, but you could argue that he saved hundreds. The Madrid bombing killed 191 people.
Now, what if your "ends" are to free the enslaved? Your means are to invade the land of and kill the slave owners.
He spoke. And drank rapidly a glass of water
No.
Next question?
Never?
I was hoping for a thorough discussion of utilitarianism (yes, there's an entire philosophical school of thought on this subject), but I'm only seeing two word replies. I'm a little disappointed. If all you can say is "no" to the OP, then you haven't really considered the philosophy. The thing about utilitarianism, is that YOU can define what the ends are, and only then if the means justify the cost.
Depends whether what he did was legally sanctioned or not.
Utilitarianism made the most sense to me, but it was as flexible as you wanted it to be.
Depends whether what he did was legally sanctioned or not.
Why is law the arbiter of what is ethical?
I propose (for the sake of argument) that the law is merely the least common denominator of ethics. That point at which, if you stoop beneath, the vast supermajority of society agrees you must be punished. Any extension of the law beyond that is unjust. (I'm excluding the streamlining aspect of regulation for the sake of keeping my argument short). Meaning, that if it is debatable whether or not what the officer did was right, it should be legal and he should not serve time.
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