Torture and the Ticking Time Bomb Theory
Professor Stephen Griffin over at Balkanization has a thoughtful post on torture and the ticking time bomb theory in the context of Judge Richard Posner's new book, Not a Suicide Pact. Posner seems to embrace the TTB theory.
Posner comments: "In the era of weapons of mass destruction, torture may sometimes be the only means of averting the death of thousands, even millions, of Americans. In such a situation it would be the moral and political duty of the president to authorize torture. It seems odd that people who accept this point nevertheless denounce torture with such ferocity."
Griffen says,
What disturbs me is the moral shallowness of this particular scenario. Defined in a common sense way, torture involves deliberate cruelty and, as such, should be absolutely prohibited.
In understanding what is wrong with the TTB, we would do well to remind ourselves that it is a fantasy, and a fairly insidious one at that, judged by its ubiquity. The TTB is not a historical episode that we can examine in all its complexity and, as far as I know, nothing like it has ever happened (I am assuming that the TTB scenario involves a terrorist attack intended to kill at least thousands of people and is thus not about an "ordinary crime"). Instead, it is a hypothetical designed to score moral and policy points. That it has apparently scored so many is a disturbing testament to the lack of moral imagination in current public debate. For one is allowed, I believe, to counter fantastic hypotheticals with other hypotheticals.
There's lots more, and I side with Griffen. He cites a soon to be published article, Hypothetical Torture in the "War on Terrorism" by Kim Lane Scheppele, and one of the commenters provides this link to it.
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