1. It is morally impermissible to perform an action that is in-itself bad;
2. It is morally impermissible to directly intend something bad—even for the sake of something good;
3. Harming someone is, in-itself, bad. — Bob Ross
I am not beginning with moral principles with respect to my ethical theory: I am a virtue ethicist. — Bob Ross
And harming the child's skin to immunise it is not a part of the means?
Couldn't harm towards the attacker be called a bad side effect of self-defence?
It seems your phrase "directional flow" refers to causal flow?
If so, I don't think that matters at all.
Ethical egoism is a theory that argues for the person who is doing the action -- what is best for this person.
Other consequentialism argues for the common good.
Or how about someone trying to commit rape then becoming the rape victim? Are these equally 'bad'?
Your action is to stay in the chair. An action is simply a decision of what to do as a living being from moment to moment.
An omission is generally understood as "Not doing the right thing"
If I didn't choose to act, how did I act?
If I choose to go on a hunger strike, I am acting purposefully not to eat.
Given the OP's stipulations, there isn't going to be an intelligent discussion here. Just so you know. And that's because the OP's argument is laid down to fail.I am not making an argument from ethical egoism: if you would like to import it to explain how one can justify self-defense given the OP’s stipulations, then I am more than happy to entertain it. — Bob Ross
with a 'bad' act (eg. violence to suppress violence) to be 'bad in-itself'. This is clearly false equivalence. — I like sushi
Given the following stipulations, I am wondering if there is a way to salvage the principle of self-defense; and would like to here all of your responses. — Bob Ross
No. A means is something that facilitates the end: causing pain to the child is not a part of what facilitates the end of giving them immunity; which is self-apparent when one considers if the end would still be facilitated properly on a child with an inability to feel pain. — Bob Ross
Is harm thought to be synonymous with injustice? Or can harm occur which is not unjust? For example, if someone enters your house with a gun and you sneak up behind them and knock them unconscious in order to incapacitate them, would the negative utilitarian say that you have harmed them? If this does not count as harm, then it is presumably because the act is not unjust, and in that case injustice (in the classical sense) would be coextensive with harm (in the negative utilitarian sense). — Leontiskos
I apologize Philosophim: I ran out of time to respond earlier. — Bob Ross
The biggest problem with your analysis is that you see no difference between making a choice and acting — Bob Ross
An action is a volition of will with an intention — Bob Ross
a choice is the decision reached through a process of rational deliberation — Bob Ross
an inaction is a lack of action — Bob Ross
1. Not all actions are choices: some are merely voluntary. One may very well do something that is in correspondence with their will (i.e., do something voluntarily) without rationally deliberating about it (i.e., choose it) (e.g., punching a wall in pure rage). — Bob Ross
A choice is an action: one is deliberating (viz., thinking), and this is a volition of the will with the intention of contemplation (about something). — Bob Ross
An inaction is not an action: this is obvious, so I will leave it there. — Bob Ross
4. One can choose something (viz., reach a conclusion) without further acting on it. — Bob Ross
Not all actions are voluntary. E.g., If you hold a gun up to my head and tell me to eat a bowl of ice cream or die and I do it; then I am not doing this because it corresponds to my will in any meaningful sense (if I am doing it to avoid dying). — Bob Ross
From your statement that “your action is to stay in the chair” in the case of choosing to not get up from the chair, I find if self-evident that you are lacking a robust analysis of what “action” is. — Bob Ross
If I do not get up, then I performed the act of not getting up; which is just to say that I didn’t perform an act at all. — Bob Ross
I mean it in the more prominent sense of omitting something or someone. E.g., I consider it morally omissible to not do something and let something bad happen if the only way to prevent that bad thing from happening is to do something bad. — Bob Ross
I would find this morally omissible, in the sense that they are not going to be held morally responsible for not taking the measures to save the five. — Bob Ross
Some voluntary acts which are not chosen, may be chosen indirectly by means of choosing to instill a habit which tends to produce that act—e.g., one may install the habit of eating healthy by way of choice (i.e., by rationally deliberating about it), and once that habit has a strong hold one may find themselves wanting and eating a healthy meal without thinking about it all. — Bob Ross
If I choose to go on a hunger strike, I am acting purposefully not to eat.
It is purposeful, but not an action. — Bob Ross
You are not doing anything; just like if you decide to not pull the lever and let the five get run over by the train: did you do anything by not pulling the lever? No. — Bob Ross
Whereas, truly not doing something doesn't actualize anything; e.g., if I make the decision that my phone should continue to lie on the table exactly where it is, then me not picking it up is not an action. — Bob Ross
Once a person knows and understands their options in a moral situation, they cannot stop being a part of the equation by simply 'doing nothing'. In the end, their 'inaction' to alter a situation is fully within the choices that are being judged. — Philosophim
I say the above because you seemed to frame rape as being 'bad in-itself' whereas I do not see defending one's self, or others, with a 'bad' act (eg. violence to suppress violence) to be 'bad in-itself'. This is clearly false equivalence.
It is certainly not morally impermissible to punch someone in the face, but it is without a damn good reason to do so. The REASON adds weigh to the permissibility of an act.
Does it then follow that it is okay to "harm" an attacker who cannot feel pain? And that because the end is still achieved in such a case, therefore the infliction of "harm" is a side effect?
The key here is that when it comes to self-defense harm is not a precondition for success.
For example, one relevant difference between your case and the nurse who vaccinates or the surgeon who makes an incision, is that this is presumably done with consent or at least implied consent on the part of the patient.
the categorical (3) should qualified by the innocence of the victim: "Do not harm the innocent."
An inaction is not an action: this is obvious, so I will leave it there. — Bob Ross
No, I don't think so. If you would, I would like you to explain why the following is wrong.
an inaction is a lack of action — Bob Ross
Yes, on a set of choices.
An inaction is a choice to not act on one or more possible actions. And in this, I am using using the logic that if one acts on A, one is not acting on B. Total inaction, is for all possible letters, you did not act on them. That means the removal of actionable agency. This is if we are using the terms consistently and logically.
"The inaction of A, the action of B".
Of course you did something. You chose not to pull the lever, and did something else.
Again, I think 'morally permissible' conveys your intention clearly
I have a feeling the real goal here is that you want a person to have a 'get out of jail free card' on moral situations by claiming 'not acting' means they weren't involved
My point with Lionino was that the relevant difference between punching someone in self-defense and injecting someone with a needle to provide immunity is that the latter case has a means which has a double effect whereas the former has one effect that produces the other effect. — Bob Ross
It seems to me that the only way to justify self-defense is to either (1) abandon stipulation #1 or (2) reject #3. — Bob Ross
No, because “harm” is more than just physical pain. — Bob Ross
That is true as well; but, like I said, the needle is the means and it produces two simultaneous effects: physical harm and immunity. — Bob Ross
My point with Lionino was that the relevant difference between punching someone in self-defense and injecting someone with a needle to provide immunity is that the latter case has a means which has a double effect whereas the former has one effect that produces the other effect. Viz., me punching that perp in the face directly produces only the effect of causing harm and only indirectly (as a subsequence) the effect of preserving myself—which is not a double effect proper. It is the 7 diagram as opposed to the V. — Bob Ross
but I am thinking of cases of self-defense which would require [causing harm], as is the case for the vast majority (e.g., punching someone in the face, knocking them out, engaging in a shootout, etc.). — Bob Ross
Yes, this is true: I could say it is not bad in-itself to harm another but, rather, it is bad in-itself to harm an innocent person; and this is honestly probably the solution. The problem is that if we are analyzing harm in-itself, then it does seem bad irregardless—which comes to light when we consider using excessive force in self-defense. — Bob Ross
I don’t know what “action of agency” is vs. “action” simpliciter. — Bob Ross
I understand that you use “choice” in a looser sense, but what exactly is it under your view? — Bob Ross
I don’t understand what you mean by “if one acts on A, then one is not acting on B”. Again, A could entail B: there’s nothing logically impossible about that. — Bob Ross
With respect to the situation of the 1 vs. 5 trolley problem, you didn’t do anything else—that’s the point! You did something insofar as you rationally deliberated (viz., made a decision) to not pull the lever; but not pulling the lever is not itself an action—and this is what I want to see if we agree on or not. — Bob Ross
Moral omissibility is not the same as moral permissibility; and the former is not standardly the same as “doing something impermissible”: it is separate moral category of thought. — Bob Ross
Something that is morally permissible is something which is not bad; whereas something that is morally omissible is bad but is exempt from moral responsibility — Bob Ross
because failing to reasonably prevent a bad effect or act is in-itself bad, but in some cases it is exempt from moral scrutiny; and one such example is when one cannot act in any morally permissible way to prevent the bad act or effect from happening. — Bob Ross
The absurdity in your view, so far, is that there is no such thing as allowing or letting something bad happen; as opposed to doing something bad; because you completely lack the vocabulary to notate a choice to not act, since you think inaction is action. — Bob Ross
But could Lionino not say the same thing, namely that the child who does not feel the needle penetrating their skin is still being harmed by the needle? — Leontiskos
Simultaneous in what sense? — Leontiskos
I thought the claim to have acted in self defence was the way one justified an act of harm. You want a justification of the justification? — unenlightened
Maybe there is a difference between justifying to society and justifying to oneself that is relevant here? — wonderer1
causing pain to the child is not a part of what facilitates the end of giving them immunity — Bob Ross
The problem you are having is that you don’t have a refined conceptual understanding of what a means is. — Bob Ross
A means is something that facilitates the end — Bob Ross
I mean the flow of intention—e.g., an archer aiming at their target. — Bob Ross
Whether or not one directly intends something matters, because moral agency is agent-centric. — Bob Ross
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