Torture: Is It Morally Acceptable?
Part 1: Introduction
Is torture morally acceptable? In the U.S., arguments have been made both for and against the use of torture in fighting terrorism. Enhanced interrogation technique is a term that has been supplemented in the place of “torture” to make practices like waterboarding seem more acceptable to the public—but in spite of the name applied, the same questions persist. Depending on one’s ethical perspective, torture may or may not be justified. There are several practical problems with torture—namely that confessions made under duress do not even hold up in a court of law, so to assume that any information obtained under duress would be authentic is to go against reason as used in courts of law. However, this paper will look at the morality of torture using the deontological position. First, it will explain the deontological position. Then it will show that from the basis of duty to prisoners of war, torture is immoral. From there it will discuss the counter-argument from the utilitarian position. A response to the utilitarian objection will also be given, and summary will conclude the paper. The argument this paper makes is that torture is neither morally acceptable from the deontological position nor from the utilitarian position from which one might object to the deontological argument.
Part 2: Ethical Argument
The key ethical issues in this topic are that prisoners of war or suspects of any crime are protected by law (both national and international) and have rights as human beings that must be respected. When a nation abuses those rights and violates them, they send a message to the international community that they neither respect the law nor respect human rights. Such a message is an offense to justice and can rouse the righteous anger of many in the international and national community, which can in turn lead to blowback in terms of more aggressive and hostile behavior from those who are opposed to the doctrines and actions of the nation doing the torture. Nations have a duty to protect and respect the rights of prisoners of war and of suspects who are detained for whatever reason.
The moral argument here can be supported by deontology, utilitarianism and virtue ethics. Deontology supports it, obviously,...
References
Mosser, K. (2013). Ethics and social responsibility (2nd ed.) [Electronic version].
O'Mara, S. (2015). Why Torture Doesn’t Work. Harvard University Press.
Sandle, M. (2009). Justice: What’s the Right Thing to Do? NY: Farrar, Straus, Giroux.
Sen, A. (1983). Evaluator relativity and consequential evaluation. Philosophy & Public Affairs, 113-132.
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