Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1

JUST WAR THEORY


130

account of human nature, both con-
sciousness and the collective uncon-
scious. In the latter, Jung posited
archetypal patterns that he thought were
shared by all humans. Jung’s work was
more amenable to a positive religious
interpretation than Freud’s, and his work
has some influence in religious treat-
ments of God’s relationship to the human
conscious and unconscious. Near the end
of his life, Jung became deeply concerned
with the apparent emptiness of modern
materialism and he counseled a recovery
of spirituality. His works include Psychol-
ogy of the Unconscious (1912), and Psy-
chological Types (1921), Man and His
Symbols (published posthumously in
1964), and an autobiography, Memories,
Dreams, Reflections (1961).


JUST WAR THEORY. The topic con-
cerning moral restrictions on warfare that
go back to some of the earliest recorded
works on war. Just war theory posits the
question: is anything and thus everything
permissible in war? Great empires have
carried out savage massacres with no
regard to noncombatants or prisoners, or
whether or not warfare is justified on the
grounds of self-defense or divine sanction.
Just War Theory has emerged slowly
in the history of ideas and culture and
addresses the following conditions: Is
nation (or empire or community) A justi-
fied in waging war on nation B if (1) there
is no other, peaceful alternative, i.e., a last


resort, (2) Nation B has without proper
provocation attacked A or attacked
another nation C to which A has alle-
giance, (3) Nation A’s intention or goal is
restricted to repelling B’s illicit, unpro-
voked attack and securing a stable peace;
hence, the ultimate intention or goal of A
must be peace, and (4) Nation A does not
intend or foresee using illicit means in
executing the war (directly killing or tor-
turing noncombatants)? Other condi-
tions have been taken into account such
as the likelihood of A defeating B and a
calculation of the costs involved.

JUSTICE. Justice is a surprisingly com-
plex and diverse term in the history of
philosophy of religion. The ancients saw
justice as a virtue; see, for example, Plato’s
Republic and Aristotle’s lengthy investiga-
tion in the Nichomachean Ethics. In the
sense of virtue, justice tends to focus on
the correct alignment of character in both
the person and the state. Socrates’ thesis
in Plato’s Republic is that the best way to
understand the virtue of justice for an
individual is to look at justice in the ideal
state. His conclusion is that justice is the
right placement of the rational, passion-
ate, and appetitive characteristics of the
body in question. Aristotle sees justice as
the mean between the extremes of per-
forming injustices upon others as an act
of overreaching one’s proper place and
accepting too many injustices and not
receiving one’s due.
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