
| Document Type: | Master's Thesis |
| Name: | Peter Kilner |
| Email address: | pkilner@vt.edu |
| URN: | 1998/00599 |
| Title: | Soldiers, Self-Defense, and Killing in War |
| Degree: | Master of Arts |
| Department: | Philosophy |
| Committee Chair: | Harlan B. Miller |
| Chair's email: | harlan.b.miller@vt.edu |
| Committee Members: | John Christman |
| Patrick Croskery | |
| Keywords: | military ethics, just war, pacifism, killing |
| Date of defense: | May 7, 1998 |
| Availability: | Release the entire work immediately worldwide. |
Just-Warists and War-Pacifists disagree on whether soldiers are morally justified in killing each other in wartime combat. Many of their respective arguments, and their contradictory conclusions, are based upon principles of self-defense. In this thesis, I examine the role that principles of self-defense play in the arguments surrounding the moral justification of killing in combat. I do so by critiquing both a Just-Warist argument that relies on self-defense (constructed from the works of Michael Walzer and Judith Jarvis Thomson) and a War-Pacifist argument (developed by Richard Norman) that condemns killing in combat based on the moral requirements of self-defense. I demonstrate that both arguments fail due to their mistaken assumptions that soldiers are not morally responsible for their actions. I conclude by arguing that--once soldiers are recognized as morally responsible agents--killing in combat can be morally justified by principles of self-defense.
List of Attached Files | ||
| PKVITA.PDF | etd.PDF | |