War and MoralityRichard A. Wasserstrom Wadsworth, 1970 - 136 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 19
עמוד 43
... authority is evil is akin to thinking the flesh evil and family life evil . These things belong to the present constitution of mankind ; and if the exercise of coercive power is a manifestation of evil , and not the just means of ...
... authority is evil is akin to thinking the flesh evil and family life evil . These things belong to the present constitution of mankind ; and if the exercise of coercive power is a manifestation of evil , and not the just means of ...
עמוד 44
... authority ; but in warfare - or the putting down by violence of civil disturbance - the sovereign authority is itself engaged as a party to the dispute and is not subject to a further earthly and temporal authority which can judge the ...
... authority ; but in warfare - or the putting down by violence of civil disturbance - the sovereign authority is itself engaged as a party to the dispute and is not subject to a further earthly and temporal authority which can judge the ...
עמוד 45
Richard A. Wasserstrom. authority to have to do anything but apprehend its internal enemy and have him tried : but even in the stablest society there are occasions when the authority has to fight its internal enemy to the point of ...
Richard A. Wasserstrom. authority to have to do anything but apprehend its internal enemy and have him tried : but even in the stablest society there are occasions when the authority has to fight its internal enemy to the point of ...
תוכן
Introduction | 1 |
The Morality of Obliteration Bombing John C Ford S | 42 |
A Philosophical Analysis Jan Narveson | 54 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
4 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
action aggressive American Anscombe argue argument army Article attack authority behavior believe brutality Catholic Charter Christian cities civil population civilian population claim committed common plan condemned crimes against humanity criminal death of innocent defend destruction discuss distinction doctrine of self-defense double effect duty Elizabeth Anscombe enemy estimate Ethics evangelical counsels example fact fighting Germany guerrillas Hague Convention immoral individual innocent civilians innocent persons intention international law jus in bello justified killing Land Warfare large number laws of war least limits means meet violence merely military necessity millions modern murder nations Nazi non-combatants nuclear weapons obligations obliteration bombing one's pacifism pacifist peace philosophical position possible present problem punishment question rational persuasion reason relevant responsibility rules self-defense soldiers Spaight superior orders suppose target thing total war treaty Tribunal unjust violation violence with force waging war crimes war of aggression wars wrong