The virtue of Justice regarding the Body

Man's body does not belong to him.
If it did, we could do whatever we 
wanted with it, like we do with our possessions.

However, it is not the case, because 
in order to have a right of ownership 
2 things are needed:

a subject who owns; the owner,
and the thing that is owned,

the 2 things must be distinct 
from each other.
Which is not the case with man.

Man is a substantiel whole, 
composed metaphysically 
of a body and a soul.

How many beings are there 
between the body and the soul?

There is only one; 
Only one substance.

The body and soul are the 
principles of the being.

Am I my body?
No.
Am I my soul?
No.

I am my body and soul, 
both of them
together, substantially united. 

Since there is only one being 
in me, there cannot be a right 
of ownership of one over the 
other.

The French philosopher Descartes 
came up with the idea that the 
soul was the master of the body. 
He compared it to the captain of a 
ship in the relation to his ship.
 
The problem with this analogy is 
that the captain can anchor his 
ship and get off, and on again, 
when he wants, 
whereas we cannot take our soul 
in and out of our bodies.
 
We are body and soul in one.

So who does our body belong to?
It belongs to God. 

God has universal ownership 
on all things,
He has ownership of us, 
He is the Creator and the Master, 
we are His things. 

We also own things, things that 
are ours.
For example you are the full owner 
of your car, and also the owner of the utilisation of your car. 

But when you rent a car then 
you are only the owner of the
right to utilise the car, you will
have to give it back.

Man has the ownership of the 
utilisation of the body; the totality 
of the being which is the body and
the soul, 
and in this sense there is a right of ownership because now there is 
2 elements present:

1. The subject who possesses; man,
2. The right to utilisation of the body.

God gave us the right to the utilisation 
of our body.

So does that mean that we can do 
whatever we like with the body?

No, because we are not the owner 
of it,
but we are meant to use it. 

That's why we have morals to guide 
our actions.

An action is deemed to be good 
when it respects and is in accordance 
with the purpose of the action.

E.g. I eat because I want to nourish 
the body, it gives me strength to do 
what I need to do, but I don't eat 
only for the pleasure of eating.
Thus the purpose of the action is 
respected.

Short resumé of Catholic teaching concerning the body:

1. Man is not the proprietor of his body
2. Man has the right of usage of his body.

Man should use the body in accordance 
with the purpose of his actions.

This is the basis for the entire Catholic 
morality: to respect the purpose of our
actions. 

So God has ownership of us, but He 
gives to man's spirit the governance
of his own actions.

Ecclesiasticus ( Sirach) 15:14:
" It was He who created humankind
in the beginning, and He left them
in the power of their own free choice".

To this end He equipped us with 
intelligence.

5th commandment:
Thou shall not kill.

Suicide:
When a person takes away his
life by his own authority he 
destroys something that belongs
to someone else.

God created us, our existence,
and He remains our Master and 
Lord.
Suicide is a sin against God, against 
oneself and against society.
The person takes the place of God
in his decision.

There is also what is called indirect 
suicide, when the person knows 
that his action is likely to kill him,
however it is not the purpose or
intention of his actions. E.g: the 
doctor or priest who enters a 
leprosy colony to help know that 
they are likely to catch it themselves,
the priest who goes into a battlefield 
to give the Sacraments to injured or 
dying soldiers, does so knowing that
he is putting his own life on the line.

These cases are not regarded in the  
same way as direct suicide, even 
though the person knows that his 
own life might be taken as a result 
of his actions, because it lacks 
the expressed intent.

Suicide is a grave sin, but let it
be clear that in stating this, there
is no judgement or condamnation,
because only God can judge, and we
know that the suffering endured can
sometimes be so intense, that it can
be a case of reduced responsibility.

Objectively suicide is a grave offence
towards God.

Also; any bodily mutilation is a sin.
With the obvious exceptions of 
removing sick body parts in order to 
preserve life, in cases of cancer or
gangrene for example, what we see
today in the big business of surgically 
removing healthy breasts and healthy 
sexual organs of vulnerable and 
confused young people, is a grave sin,
against God and against oneself.

In regard to our body, we have an 
obligation to take care of it, in a 
normal way; in order to preserve 
life. 

Homicide: to cause the death of 
another person by one's own 
authority. 
Whether the person being killed is
guilty of something or not, is not 
the issue, the issue is that it is 
forbidden, we do not have, as 
individuals,  the authority to 
take anyone's life, only God has
that authority.

However the society do have the 
right, the government can decide to 
eliminate a member, in the interest 
of the good of society as a whole,
similarly to cutting off a sick part
of the body in order to preserve it's
life. 

The taking of life, killing, is the 
greatest injustice in the natural 
order, between human beings, 
it does not apply to animals or 
plants or other things.


However killing in self defence 
is allowed, when there are no 
other possible way to prevent 
an aggressor who attacks us; who
tries to maim, rape or kill us.
If he can be neutralized in some
other way we are obliged to do
that instead, the taking of life is
always the last resort, when there
are no other options to stop 
the person. 
It has to be in the actual situations 
as they are taking place, it does
not apply to revenge killings for 
past events, no matter how justified 
we feel we are.
And it applies to situations where
we are unjustly attacked, not for
example if we have provoked a 
situation ourselves.



 









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