Book contents
- Moral Philosophy
- Talking Philosophy
- Moral Philosophy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Rationality and Goodness
- Acting well
- Apprehending Human Form
- Does Modern Moral Philosophy Rest on a Mistake?
- Absolutes and Particulars
- On the So-called Logic of Practical Inference
- Absolute Prohibitions without Divine Promises
- Moral Obligation
- The Lesser Evil
- The Ethics of Co-operation in Wrongdoing
- Authority
- The Force of Numbers
- Reason, Intention, and Choice
- Modern Moral Philosophy and the Problem of Relevant Descriptions
- Index
Absolute Prohibitions without Divine Promises
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2022
- Moral Philosophy
- Talking Philosophy
- Moral Philosophy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Rationality and Goodness
- Acting well
- Apprehending Human Form
- Does Modern Moral Philosophy Rest on a Mistake?
- Absolutes and Particulars
- On the So-called Logic of Practical Inference
- Absolute Prohibitions without Divine Promises
- Moral Obligation
- The Lesser Evil
- The Ethics of Co-operation in Wrongdoing
- Authority
- The Force of Numbers
- Reason, Intention, and Choice
- Modern Moral Philosophy and the Problem of Relevant Descriptions
- Index
Summary
Punishment of the innocent appears early on in the essay3 as a species of the genus ‘injustice’, and Anscombe notes that ‘in present-day philosophy an explanation is required how an unjust man is a bad man, or an unjust action a bad one’; whereas, in her own (much-quoted) view, it would be a ‘great improvement’ if generic terms such as ‘untruthful’, ‘unchaste’, ‘unjust’ were treated as bedrock for the purpose of guiding action: ‘We should no longer ask whether doing something was “wrong”, passing directly from some description of an action to this notion; we should ask whether, e.g., it was unjust; and the answer would sometimes be clear at once.’4 But with the turn towards consequentialism in Moore and his successors, a situation develops in which ‘every one of the best known English academic moral philosophers [with some qualification in regard to R. M. Hare] has put out a philosophy according to which, e.g., it is not possible to hold that it cannot be right to kill the innocent as a means to any end whatsoever and that someone who thinks otherwise is in error’.5 Anscombe draws the conclusion that ‘all these philosophies are quite incompatible with the Hebrew-Christian ethic. For it has been characteristic of that ethic to teach that there are certain things forbidden whatever consequences threaten’—and she supplies a longish list which is headed by ‘choosing to kill the innocent for any purpose, however good’.6
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- Moral Philosophy , pp. 217 - 245Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022