It's 50 years since I read Kant's Groundwork, so I can't claim to be very familiar these days with his moral views. I do think that he was right to condemn treating beings as mere means when they should be treated as ends, though I think his criteria for a being counting as an end were wrong: any being capable of experiencing pleasure and/or pain should be treated as an end, and not just humans.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:53 am According to Kant,
the individual[s] and the-collective need to strive to be morally competent, relative to his current moral competency abilities. If indexed at 100 then progress to 101, 102 .. and so on, or try to achieve a quantum jump say, 101, 102, 110, 111, 115 .. and so on.
At present, while progressing to an ideal, in any casuistry dilemma, one should act spontaneously to the best of one's ability with a mindfulness of the objective ideal standard.
In the above case, the surgeon can either kill a healthy patient to save 5 premature-dying unhealthy patients [or otherwise] for whatever the reason which to him is the most rational on assumption he is committed to a path of moral progress toward the ideal.
In an emergency situations like a Trolley Cases, one should just act with as little thinking as possible but with an afterthought of how to prevent similar dilemmas happening in the first place in the future.
For Kant, one has to do one's best at the present; for the collective, it has to work towards the future [for elimination or prevention of moral dilemmas] where there are no unhealthy patients to generate any moral dilemma for any surgeon to decide.
For example, I stated, AT PRESENT, given one's psychological and moral competency, one can have as many abortions as one need to; what is needed at present is to inculcate into the individual[s] and society the need to expedite moral progress in the future in preventing the need for abortion due to unplanned births.
The moral solution is to develop high moral competence in all humans to the extent that unplanned births are eliminated or prevented to the extreme minimal so that there is no need to be bothered with the question of abortion.
Abortion is still permitted in warranted unavoidable situations, but the collective will strive to eliminate or prevent "warranted" situations to the extreme minimum in the future.
For FDP as a moral skeptic, he has no moral say in anything moral and will not be bothered with any moral progress. The same for moral relativists who has to tolerate and respect the moral views of others.
If you are a moral objectivists, what plans do you have for moral progress in the future? Engaging with moral dilemmas forever and eternally?
You don't seem to have any?
I think aborting any being whose life is expected to have a positive balance of pleasure over pain is wrong, and its wrongness is in proportion to the size of that balance. It doesn't follow that abortion is bad: for example, it would probably have been wrong to abort Hitler, because his moral standing was probably high, but it would have been a good thing to abort him because millions of people would have lived longer and happier lives. The same goes for other evil dictators such as Putin. Personally in such cases I would choose goodness over rightness, but I can't justify that choice on any objective grounds.
Abortion may be wrong and yet no-one be morally to blame: this will be the case if the people responsible for the abortion either don't realise they are doing wrong, or have no effective free will and couldn't have done otherwise.
As for moral progress, better planning of pregnancies should reduce the wrong of abortions, but at the end of the day I'm an amateur philosopher not a social planner, so I don't regard it as my responsibility to produce plans for future progress in the behaviour of the population.