Title: Pope Paul VI Institute
1Pope Paul VI Institute
- Principles of Morality, Double Effect and
Cooperation - By Fr. Edward J. Richard,
- MS, JD, DThM
2Morality
- Part I-Fundamental Points
- Part II-Double Effect
- Part III-Cooperation in Evil
3Part I - The Morality of Human Acts
- CCC1749. Human acts, that is, acts that are
freely chosen in consequence of a judgment of
conscience, can be morally evaluated. They are
either good or evil.
4What good must I do?
- What is morality all about?
- There are numerous theories about what would
constitute a good life ex. Hedonist, epicurean,
pragmatist, utilitarian, etc.
5What good must I do?
- Our question is answered by the concept of the
perfection of our human nature, with all its
capacities, especially the inclination to truth
and moral goodness. - Our basic moral principle is Do good avoid
evil - Good leads to happiness evil is contrary to our
nature. - Then, how do we do that?
6The Moral Life
Virtues
The Goal of Human Life
7Virtue
- A habitual and firm disposition to do the good
- Human and Supernatural
- Characterized by
- Promptness or readiness to act
- Ease or facility in performing the action
- Joy or satisfaction in its attainment
8 The Morality of Particular Actions
- 1750 The Morality of human acts depends on
- --the object chosen
- --the end in view or the intention
- --the circumstances of the action.
9The object
- A good towards which the will deliberately
directs itself. It specifies the act of the
will. - The object is the result of choice in the
will. Is the good which is the object of
choice in conformity with our true end? - It is extremely important to remember that we
are thinking here of the moral order.
10The Object
- Thus we are speaking of the moral object of an
action and not merely the physical object or
merely the physical act.
11Moral Object
- Physical Act
- Carnal Intercourse
- Killing
- Moral Object
- Fornication, adultery
- Murder
- Abortion
- euthanasia
12The Object
- Carnal intercourse has no specific identification
in the moral order. But carnal intercourse
between the unmarried is described by the moral
term "fornication." What is meant by fornication
makes it a moral object. - The object answers the question, What is one
doing? - It is also clear that the object is the result of
a choice about the means to achieve an outcome.
13Teaching CrMFC
- What does a CrM Practitioner do?
- What is the object of the action?
- One might want to see to avoid or achieve a
pregnancy. The means one chooses is the object.
14Intention- Why?
- 1752 Intention resides exclusively in the acting
subject. . . The end is the first goal of the
intention and indicates the purposes pursued in
the action. - 1753 But a good intention a sincere desire to
do good does not make behavior that is
intrinsically disordered good or just.
15Intention
- The end does not justify the means. On the other
hand, an added bad intention (such as vainglory)
makes an act evil, that in itself, can be good
(such as almsgiving). - One might have a legitimate intention of avoiding
pregnancy, say for health reasons. - This intention does not justify the choice of
immoral means.
16 The circumstances
- 1754 The circumstances, including the
consequences, are secondary elements of the moral
act.
17Circumstances
- They contribute to increasing or diminishing the
moral goodness or evil of a human act. (the
amount of a theft) They can also diminish or
increase the agent's responsibility (such as
acting out of fear of death).
18Circumstances
- Circumstances of themselves cannot change the
moral evil of acts themselves they can make
neither good nor right an action that is in
itself evil.
19Virtue and Good Action
- Virtue helps us to do the good and avoid evil
- How does virtue help us?
What, Why, Circumstances (many possibilities,inc.
consequences)
Human Good
20Prudence
- Prudence is the capacity to know how to pursue
the good and avoid evil in every circumstance - It guides all of our virtues
- In prudence we must judge that we are choosing
the best means to achieve the good, with the
intention of avoiding as much evil as possible
21Choosing the Good
- Following the moral path involves the use of all
the virtues, under the guidance of Prudence, to
make sure that good is chosen and evil is avoided - So morality is clearly a matter of will
- We are talking about goods intended and foreseen
evils
22Part II - Principle of Double Effect
- Here we have to look at the results of the act,
even though we might not intend them. - When an action will have two effects,
-
- one good one which is intended, and
- another evil effect which is foreseen, not
intended, but only permitted,
23Double Effect
- The intended effect, good or evil, is called
direct - The unintended but foreseen effect is said to be
indirect - They are both voluntary
24Principle of Double Effect
- The driver of a car swerves to avoid the
pedestrian but sees that the car will hit the
parked truck. - It is evident that the agent is in some way
responsible for both effects. - It is the agents action (and a choice) which
produces the two effects, and if he or she did
not place the action, the evil effect would not
materialize here and now.
25Principle of Double Effect
- Does right order (i.e., Do good and avoid evil,
which must be preserved as a fundamental tenet of
the natural law) demand that one refrain from the
action - if not, under what circumstances is such an
action consonant with right order?
26Two precepts of the Natural Law must be attended
to
- One must not intend to do that which is evil.
(negative precept) - One must prevent evil insofar as one can
reasonably do so. (positive precept)
27Principle of Double Effect
- The Principle of Double Effect states that an
action, good in itself, which has two effects--an
intended good effect, and a foreseen, but not
intended evil effectis moral provided there is a
just order between the intended good and the
permitted evil.
28Principle of Double Effect
- A large number of moral questions are solved by
the principle of double effect. - This can be an important question in most
client-related issues. - You have a good action (teaching) with a good
effect (knowledge which benefits health,
morality, etc.)
29Principle of Double Effect
- Can one do the good of teaching CrMFC when the
person intends to use the knowledge for an evil
purpose? - To what extend does one need to avoid teaching a
person who is going to use CrMFC to achieve an
immoral end?
30Principle of Double Effect
- Double Effect is probably the more important
principle (over cooperation) in most
client-related issues. - You have a good action (teaching in conformity
with moral law) with a good effect (knowledge
which benefits health, morality, etc.) - A clinical, and effective transmission of a sound
theology of the human body
31Principle of Double Effect-Overview
- 1. That the action, in itself, be good or at
least indifferent - 2. That the good effect cannot be obtained in
some equally expeditious way, without the
concomitant evil - 3. That the evil effect be not directly willed,
but only permitted. Under no condition can the
action be even partially prompted by a desire for
the evil effect. Otherwise the evil effect
becomes a direct voluntary effect. - 4. That the evil effect be not a means to
producing the good effect. Otherwise, the evil
effect, like any other means, would be
necessarily directly willed. - 5. That there be a right order between the good
that is intended and the evil that is permitted.
32The Parts of the Principle
- The Action Must be Good in Itself
- It is a fundamental rule of conscience that one
may never do evil in order that good may come of
it (see St. Paul) - The action, considered in itself, apart from the
concomitant evil effect, must be morally good, or
at least indifferent. - In teaching CrMFC services, this would not be an
issue
33The Parts of the Principle
- Which Has Two Effects
-
- Good and Evil
- Both the good and the evil effects are results of
the action in question - Example Someone could use the morally good
information about fertility as part of a plan to
achieve a pregnancy out of wedlock or to engage
in fornication
34The Parts of the Principle
- Intended Good Effect-
- the knowledge of CrMFC
- is called the direct voluntary effect.
- It is the good that determines the will
- Example The direct voluntary effect that
determines the practitioners will is the desire
to communicate morally good knowledge of
fertility care principles
35The Parts of the Principle
- A Merely Permitted Evil Effect
- called the indirect voluntary effect that is,
although foreseen as an evil effect resulting
from the action, it is no way an object of the
act of the will. - Its connection with the will is indirect -- i.e.,
in that the act of the will does in some way
cause the evil effect. - Ex., it is foreseen that someone could use this
information for an immoral purpose
36The Parts of the Principle
- Just order (due proportion) Between the Intended
Good and Foreseen Evil Effects - may licitly be placed that is, without moral
guilt - provided there is a just order between the
intended good and the permitted evil - Ex., The good of establishing a center and
teaching CrMFC outweighs the potential
foreseeable evil that others might engage in. It
supports the Gospel of Life.
37Just Order or Due Proportion
- Truth about God truth about creation (Highest
but always reasonable) - Common Good-Public safety education
- Individual Good of Life
- Ones own Suicide-no martyrdom-yes.
- Ones neighbor
- Health and well-being including fertility
- Totality-can sacrifice an organ or limb to save a
life - Convenience, annoyance, minor issues of justice
- We do not permit directly destroying a
subordinate good for the sake of the greater, but
we can allow the sacrifice, as in martyrdom or
totality.
38The Parts of the Principle
- It would be contrary to right order to allow some
serious damage as a secondary result of an action
whose good effect would be relatively
insignificant. - A matter of prudent human judgment.
39The Parts of the Principle
- Otherwise not Reasonably Attained
- If the good effect could be obtained in an
equally expeditious and effective way, without
the unintended evil effect, this must be done. - In that case there would be no just reason for
permitting the evil effect. - Probably not a major issue here
40Churchs position
- Teach natural methods of fertility regulation as
a means of combating the culture of death
41Evangelium vitae
- 88. All of this involves the implementation of
long-term practical projects and initiatives
inspired by the Gospel. - Many are the means towards this end which
need to be developed with skill and serious
commitment. At the first stage of life, centers
for natural methods of regulating fertility
should be promoted as a valuable help to
responsible parenthood, in which all individuals,
and in the first place the child, are recognized
and respected in their own right, and where every
decision is guided by the ideal of the sincere
gift of self. Marriage and family counseling
agencies by their specific work of guidance and
prevention, carried out in accordance with an
anthropology consistent with the Christian vision
of the person, of the couple and of sexuality,
also offer valuable help in rediscovering the
meaning of love and life, and in supporting and
accompanying every family in its mission as the
"sanctuary of life."
42Principle of Double Effect-Summary
- 1. That the action, in itself, be good or at
least indifferent - 2. That the good effect cannot be obtained in
some equally expeditious way, without the
concomitant evil - 3. That the evil effect be not directly willed,
but only permitted. Under no condition can the
action be even partially prompted by a desire for
the evil effect. Otherwise the evil effect
becomes a direct voluntary effect. - 4. That the evil effect be not a means to
producing the good effect. Otherwise, the evil
effect, like any other means, would be
necessarily directly willed. - 5. That there be a right order between the good
that is intended and the evil that is permitted.
43Part III
44Principles of Cooperation
- Cooperation is understood to mean the
participation of more than one person in the same
immoral or criminal action. - Because someone could misuse knowledge of CrMFC
we consider the question of cooperation - Varying degrees of association in a situation
which is contrary to right order.
45Principles of Cooperation
- The responsibility of those who are the principal
agents of sinful acts (the main actor) is not the
issue - The question here is about those who participate
in some way - Some principles are helpful in establishing the
existence or degree of guilt.
46Kinds of Cooperation
- Different kinds of cooperation
- Formal
- Material
47Formal or Material
- The cooperation is either formal or material
depending upon whether one intends the sin whose
external commission one is aiding.
48Formal Cooperation
- One takes part in the evil action and at the
same time adopts the evil intention of the main
actor.
49Formal Cooperation
- A practitioner who adopts the intention of the
unmarried couple to use CrMFC to fornicate at
will is guilty of formal cooperation.
50Formal Cooperation
- A CrMFCS Practitioner who agrees with an
intention of a couple to use the knowledge she
teaches them for IVF formally cooperates
51Formal Cooperation
- Formal cooperation in the sinful act of another
is always wrong and the cooperator is equally
guilty of the act as the principal actor
52Formal Cooperation
- can be explicit or implicit
53Explicit Formal Cooperation
- Cooperation is explicit when the end intended by
the cooperator is the sin of the principal agent.
- Ex., Inez, the practitioner, adopts the intention
of the couple to use FC principles to conceive
out of wedlock.
54Implicit Formal Cooperation
- It is implicit when the cooperator does not
directly intend to associate himself with the sin
of the principal agent, but the end of the
external act (finis operis) which for the sake of
some advantage or interest the cooperator does
intend, includes from its nature or from
circumstances the guilt of the sin of the
principal agent. - In teaching this might come about if you try to
get involved for some reason in helping bring
about IVF because your cousin has a clinic and
needs the business or if you think that it is OK
for non-Catholics to use IVF
55Divisions According to Degrees of Influence
- From the viewpoint of Activity
- From the viewpoint of Dependence
- (see www.edwardjamesrichard.com go to medical
ethics page) - From the viewpoint of Nearness to the Act of the
Principal Agent
56Nearness to the act
- cooperation is either immediate or mediate,
- depending on whether the cooperator shares in the
sinful act or in some act that preceded or
followed it. - Immediate? Not likely for a practitioner Napro,
yes. - Giving information that will bring about the
immoral act.
57Immediate Material Cooperation
- occurs when one actually performs the immoral
action in cooperation with another
58Immediate Material Cooperation
- IMC will usually be formal cooperation and the
cooperator is equally guilty with the principal
agent. - IMC will usually be formal cooperation because it
is senseless to say that a person in his right
mind performs a criminal act without intending in
his will to do it.
59Immediate Material Cooperation
- Unless you actually get involved in the details
of the process of some evil action like IVF, for
example, you will not be cooperating in this way.
60Mediate material cooperation
- Mediate material cooperation involves
participation in the sinful act of another but
not in such a way that one actually places the
act with the other or concurs in the evil
intention of the other but by doing something
which is good or indifferent in itself, that
action supplies an occasion of sin to another or
supplies assistance, means or preparation.
61Mediate Material Cooperation
- The will of the cooperator is not so much that
one cooperate in the sinful act, as that the
other person uses the action of the cooperator as
occasion or assistance to his crime.
62Proximate and Remote
- MMC is subdivided into proximate and remote by
reason of its nearness according as the act of
sin will follow closely or otherwise on the act
of cooperation.
63Proximate and Remote MMC
- Proximate cooperation is more closely morally
connected with the evil action of the principal
agent, - but remote is understood to have little moral
connection with the sin. - Working with people who end up using CrMS for
immoral purposes does not necessarily make a
practitioner an immoral cooperator according to
Catholic moral principles.
64Proximate and Remote MMC
- This nearness is a Moral category.
- how definite it is that the sin of the agent
follows on the act of the cooperator? - Is there an intrinsic connection?
- The question of education. Could a lot of
education be used for an evil purpose?
65Proximate and Remote MMC
- In analyzing this look at the specific act that
you are about to do, not just the whole array of
instruction. - Does the client have a specific immoral purpose
for wanting a piece of information from you? - If you are not sure whether it is moral to
proceed, seek counsel from others with the
appropriate expertise. This is the prudent, and
therefore, moral approach.
66Proximate and Remote MMC
- What is the good effect of the clients
possession of a specific piece of information I
am asked to give? - Does that good equal or exceed the evil which the
client intends on committing? Teaching about a
particular aspect of the system (good) v. the
intended use of that information to achieve IVF
(evil). - Is there another way to achieve the same good and
avoid the evil?
67Sinfulness of Cooperation
- Some people seem to think that all cooperation is
evil and must be avoided-that is not the case. - The principles of cooperation addressed most
clearly the cases where the cooperation was
formal or where the material cooperation was a
physical act which contributed to the outcome.
The principles are not precise and do not cover
intellectual matters well.
68Sinfulness of Cooperation
- Note that in analyzing cases of cooperation
regarding teaching about the use of the signs of
fertility, the practitioner is not teaching the
techniques for IVF, nor teaching a couple how to
engage in fornication, for example, or providing
some physical assistance to those acts. - Education presents a case quite unlike the
traditional categories of cooperation.
69Formal cooperation
- always sinful since it includes the approval of
the sin of another and some willing participation
in that sin - In confession then it would not suffice to say
that one cooperated in sin, one must also
identify the sin committed.
70Material Cooperation
- In general the question of the sinfulness of
mediate material cooperation depends upon a
number of factors including an assessment of the
degree of influence and the reasons for
performing the action which will be used by the
principle actor.
71Material Cooperation
- Sometimes material cooperation might not be
permitted regardless of the various degrees of
influence, however.
72ERD 45
- Abortion (that is, the directly intended
termination of pregnancy before viability or the
directly intended destruction of a viable fetus)
is never permitted. Every procedure whose sole
immediate effect is the termination of pregnancy
before viability is an abortion, which, in its
moral context, includes the interval between
conception and implantation of the embryo.
Catholic health care institutions are not to
provide abortion services, even based upon the
principle of material cooperation. In this
context, Catholic health care institutions need
to be concerned about the danger of scandal in
any association with abortion providers.
73Quaecumque sterilizatio
- Any cooperation institutionally approved or
tolerated in actions which are in themselves,
that is, by their nature and condition, directed
to a contraceptive end . . . is absolutely
forbidden. For the official approbation of direct
sterilization and, a fortiori, its management and
execution in accord with hospital regulations, is
a matter which, in the objective order, is by its
very nature (or intrinsically) evil.
74Material cooperation, in general
- Is analyzed according to the principle of double
effect. - From the cooperation two results follow, one that
is good and one that is bad.
75Mediate Material Cooperation
- Since the cooperator foresees but does not intend
the evil he is faced with a question of the
principle of double effect. - Special consideration here is directed toward the
proportion between the cooperation and the
gravity of the crime.
76Mediate Material Cooperation
- 1. The good effect will be, at least, my own
freedom of action, plus the value of me doing
this or that action, not wrong in itself. - Teaching fertility care is a good action and
should be pursued in and of itself to appropriate
degrees for respective age levels. The good
effect is the knowledge that flows from it.
77Mediate Material Cooperation
- 2. The evil effect is the fact that the action
is an occasion for sin or an assistance to it. - The evaluation will depend upon your prudent
judgment, but remember that you can never choose
to do evil yourself to bring about some good.
78Intrinsic Evil
- An act of cooperation can be intrinsically evil
if it has no uses except such as are evil. - Teaching knowledge about identifying peak day or
ovulation would not be anything more than remote
cooperation, in general. - But that could change when you are asked a
specific question - Ex. A practitioner is asked, Would you show me
the best day, based on my chart, for me to get
artificial insemination.
79Sterilization In Catholic Hospitals
- The CDF has declared that any policy or plan on
the part of a Catholic hospital to cooperate in
sterilization is intrinsically evil. (Quaecumque
sterilizatio)
80Education about Your Purpose
- An act of cooperation is evil according to its
circumstances if it signifies approval of evil,
gives scandal, endangers the faith or virtue of
the cooperator, or violates a law of the Church. - It is not imprudent to teach knowledge of the
signs of fertility. - It could present a moral problem, however, if you
fail to educate about your intention, or allow
the client to believe that you even tacitly
accept his/her purpose.
81What is your reason for teaching?
- The second condition is that the cooperator must
have a reason sufficiently weighty to justify
permitting the evil connected with his
cooperation.
82How serious are you?
- The graver the sin that will be committed the
graver the reason required. - A graver reason is required for cooperation in
assault than for cooperation in theft. - So the greater the evil that you suspect or know
could be committed, the more reason you have to
avoid cooperating.
83- A grave reason for cooperation is required, if a
great evil incurred. - It would be imprudent to give someone specific
information when it is known with certainty that
such will result in a serious offense against
human life or dignity
84Will the person act immorally anyway?
- The greater the dependence of the evil act on
ones cooperation, the greater the reasons. - A person might act regardless of our involvement
with the net result that the only real effect of
our teaching would be to plant seeds of conversion
85Scandal
- 2284 Scandal is an attitude or behavior which
leads another to do evil. The person who gives
scandal becomes his neighbor's tempter. He
damages virtue and integrity he may even draw
his brother into spiritual death. Scandal is a
grave offense if by deed or omission another is
deliberately led into a grave offense.
86Scandal
- 2287 Anyone who uses the power at his disposal in
such a way that it leads others to do wrong
becomes guilty of scandal and responsible for the
evil that he has directly or indirectly
encouraged. "Temptations to sin are sure to come
but woe to him by whom they come!"
87Summary Point
- Pay attention to the principle of Double Effect.
- Make your intentions clear by what you say and do.
88The End