War and MoralityRichard A. Wasserstrom Wadsworth, 1970 - 136 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 33
עמוד 8
... reason or no reason , for the justifications pleaded are invariably fictitious . War is , in short , a permanent human obligation . General Homer Lea , in his recent book " The Valor of Ignorance , " plants himself squarely on this ...
... reason or no reason , for the justifications pleaded are invariably fictitious . War is , in short , a permanent human obligation . General Homer Lea , in his recent book " The Valor of Ignorance , " plants himself squarely on this ...
עמוד 35
... reason alleged to justify the infliction of enormous agonies on hundreds of thousands and even millions of innocent persons by obliteration bombing is the reason of military necessity , or of shortening the war . We hear that " it must ...
... reason alleged to justify the infliction of enormous agonies on hundreds of thousands and even millions of innocent persons by obliteration bombing is the reason of military necessity , or of shortening the war . We hear that " it must ...
עמוד 93
... reason to suppose that unilateral pacifism if practiced by an unspecified group of persons would have resulted in fewer rather than more deaths . 19 Perhaps , though , this is not what Ballou really has in mind . Perhaps instead the ...
... reason to suppose that unilateral pacifism if practiced by an unspecified group of persons would have resulted in fewer rather than more deaths . 19 Perhaps , though , this is not what Ballou really has in mind . Perhaps instead the ...
תוכן
Introduction | 1 |
The Morality of Obliteration Bombing John C Ford S J | 15 |
War and Murder Elizabeth Anscombe | 42 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
6 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
action aggression American argue argument army Article atomic attack authority behavior believe British brutality Catholic Charter Christian civil population civilian population claim command commit condemned conscience crimes against humanity criminal death of innocent defend destruction distinction doctrine of self-defense double effect duty Elizabeth Anscombe enemy Ethics example fact fighting Germany guerrillas Hague Convention immoral individual innocent persons intention international law jus in bello justified killing Land Warfare large number law of war least limits means meet violence merely military necessity modern murder nations Nazi non-combatants nuclear warfare nuclear weapons Nuremberg Nuremberg trials obliteration bombing one's pacifism pacifist peace philosophical plea of superior political position possible present prisoners problem punishment question rational persuasion reason relevant responsibility rules soldiers Spaight superior orders suppose target thing total war treaty Tribunal violation violence with force waging war crimes war of aggression wars wrong