andyandy
anthropomorphic ape
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2006
- Messages
- 8,377
In my opinion there is a difference between true intent and making a rationalization to attempt to justify immoral actions. I could rationalize lying to a woman to get her to have sex with me by telling myself she will enjoy the sex and thank me for it later, but my intent is still to deceive her.
but with intent as a determinent factor then how can one judge what is immoral? if I were a utilitarianist i would likely subscribe to consequentialism: Whether an action is morally right or wrong depends entirely on its consequences. An action is right if it brings about the best outcome of the choices available. Otherwise it is wrong.
My intent would be wholly positive - and yet this form of framing can lead to all sorts of things being regarded morally right that most people reject as morally wrong.
A simple thought experiment (from here);
Suppose that Jack is in the hospital for routine tests, and there are people
there who need vital organs right away. A doctor has the opportunity to kill Jack and make his death look natural. It would maximize happiness to cut Jack up and give his heart to one patient, his liver to another, his kidneys to still others. (We are supposing that the organs are good matches, and the other patients will die if they don’t get them).
Utilitarianism seems to imply that the doctor should kill Jack for his organs - as this maximises the outcome out of the choices available. Consequential morality jars with most individuals' concepts of morality despite having wholly positive intentions. Couldn't the consequentialist argue that the moral objector who decided that 3 people should die so that one could live was immoral - as his actions would be directly responsible for the needless death of 2 people? "Good intentions" aren't enough because who judges what is good?