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Jeff McMahan Revising the doctrine of double effect article The Doctrine of Double Effect has been challenged by the claim that what an agent intends as a means may be limited to those effects that are precisely characterised by the descriptions under which the agent believes that they are minimally causally necessary for the production of other effects that the agent seeks to bring about. If based on so narrow a conception of an intended means, the traditional Doctrine of Double Effect becomes limitlessly permissive. In this paper I examine and criticise Warren Quinn’s attempt to reformulate the Doctrine in such a way that it retains its force and plausibility even if we accept the narrow conception of an intended means. Building on Quinn’s insights, I conclude by offering a further version of the Doctrine that retains the virtues of Quinn’s account but avoids the objections to it.

Revising the doctrine of double effect

Jeff McMahan

Journal of applied philosophy, vol. 11, no. 2, 1994, pp. 201–212

Abstract

The Doctrine of Double Effect has been challenged by the claim that what an agent intends as a means may be limited to those effects that are precisely characterised by the descriptions under which the agent believes that they are minimally causally necessary for the production of other effects that the agent seeks to bring about. If based on so narrow a conception of an intended means, the traditional Doctrine of Double Effect becomes limitlessly permissive. In this paper I examine and criticise Warren Quinn’s attempt to reformulate the Doctrine in such a way that it retains its force and plausibility even if we accept the narrow conception of an intended means. Building on Quinn’s insights, I conclude by offering a further version of the Doctrine that retains the virtues of Quinn’s account but avoids the objections to it.

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