What about the fact that the cop is under duress? He's no longer a free agency and so his actions can't be morally judged. I think to be morally responsible one must be free to exercise a choice. This agrees with the common understanding of a moral agent as one fully in control of his faculties and therefore responsible for his/her actions. In this situation the cop is no longer a free agency - he's being coerced to act. If this scenario has any moral dimension it must apply to the gang members who are, apparently, free agencies and therefore responsible for the death of the victim. — TheMadFool
The undercover officer had no idea about the initiation test, they were unaware that they'd be required to kill an innocent person to join. — Taneras
Would killing them be morally wrong? — Taneras
I would say no because I believe there should be no exceptions to one's moral code. Also all people should be respected. (Yes, I basically quoted Kant, but I agree with him) — hachit
So would you then say that an undercover officer is morally wrong simply for taking the job which involves lying ? Because in your world, lying is always wrong.
How then would this tie in with 'All people should be respected' ?
While it is reasonable to suppose a freely acting person’s moral credo would not prohibit some gang related atrocities, in the interest of an objectively greater good, it is hardly moral in any case to arbitrarily extinguish a human life. Under the conditions of ignorance of an expectation for the officer having to take a life in order to save his own, he is necessarily obligated by his duty to his moral law, to self-sacrifice. — Mww
(Again, prarifrasing Kant) all human deserve to be treated as an individual person with there what's and needs.
To lie to someone undermines there judgment.
Is there job wrong, yes because lie is part of the job.
I prefer to say nothing than to lie.
I understand you point.
So a try to understand this when a cop lies it sends a message saying sometimes liying is ok. If living is sometimes ok, but when is that sometimes. To people like me is like saying liying is not a big deal, wich I think is not true. — hachit
But the officer's self sacrifice, by the terms of the dilemma, accomplishes nothing. Sacrificing a life for no gain seems contrary to preservation of life being the primary marker. — Echarmion
I don't think that is an entirely accurate application of Kant's philosophy.
they must have the simplest possible form.
I think we need to differentiate freedom in a legal sense, that is freedom from duress, full control of faculties etc, from metaphysical freedom of will. The former is used to determine whether actions are legally binding or carry consequences. The latter is the basis of morality.
From the standpoint of morality, you always have a choice. It's making a choice that demonstrates your free will, not the other way around. Choosing to refuse is still a choice, even it it gets you killed.
Of course the gang members are also responsible, but responsibility is not a zero-sum game. It can rest with many people simultaneously, or just with one.
If we excluded situations of duress from moral judgement entirely, morality would no longer be a general rule for conduct, and the definition of duress would turn into a subject of moral philosophy, where I do not think it belongs. — Echarmion
This seems a bit difficult to swallow. If someone were to force you to do something i.e. you have no choice in the matter, as is the case in the OP, would you hold yourself responsible for your actions?
Before you answer that question you have to remember that what you're doing is not your wish but someone else. You are used only as a means to an end, like a weapon as it were. — TheMadFool
It may not even be all that artificial. I gather that gangs and cartels at least sometimes perform rituals which are similar to the hypothetical. — Bitter Crank
The purpose of this sort of exercise is to bind the subject to the group by drinking from the trough of guilt and moral degradation. — Bitter Crank
But would not resisting that outside influence be the epitome of freedom, proving that you are indeed not just a means to an end, but an actor with free will?
In the real world, outside influences abound. The thief might steal because they are hungry, or addicted to drugs. Their decisions might be constrained by a difficult childhood, poverty, or their peers. Where does freedom end and coercion begin? The law sets somewhat arbitrary boundaries, but it has the advantage of being able to tailor those boundaries to a specific purpose. The ability to engage in contracts, for example, is not the same standard as criminal responsibility. Morality, though, would need a general line to be drawn. But in a deterministic world, how can you draw such a line? Is not everything part of the same causality? — Echarmion
If I remember correctly only the top Nazi members were executed for the Holocaust; the soldiers who actually did the killing were pardoned or their sentences commuted because they were just “following orders”. — TheMadFool
Its a thought experiment, similar to the trolley dilemma, which, at least in my opinion, digs at the question "from where does morality reside?". Does it reside in the act itself or the consequences of the act? — Taneras
You mention a distinction between metaphysical free will and a legal free will. Are you saying that the latter is being constrained and not the former? What exactly do you hope to achieve through this? — TheMadFool
Are you saying that despite the gang’s influence the cop still has freedom to choose? — TheMadFool
In my opinion the situation is such that free will, even the metaphysical free will you mention, is absent in the calculus. The cop simply has no choice but to do as told. — TheMadFool
If I remember correctly only the top Nazi members were executed for the Holocaust; the soldiers who actually did the killing were pardoned or their sentences commuted because they were just “following orders”. — TheMadFool
That's pretty much what I was aiming for. The vision I have for this story is fairly dark, and it's about a hero, if the reader sees this person as such but that's my goal, attempting to pull himself back out of that trough. Thanks for the non-sugarcoated observation :) — Taneras
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