Title

Military Service as a Practice: Integrating the Sword and Shield Approaches to Military Ethics

Department/School

Philosophy

Date

2006

Document Type

Article

Keywords

practice, military function, warrior code, virtue, Alasdair MacIntyre

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1080/15027570600911993

Abstract

The military's purpose centrally includes fighting its nation's wars, serving as the nation's sword. The dominant approach to military ethics today, which I will call the ‘sword approach’, focuses on this purpose and builds an ethic out of the requirements the purpose imposes on soldiers. Yet recently philosophers such as Shannon French and Nancy Sherman have developed an alternative that I will call the ‘shield approach’, which focuses on articulating a warrior code as a moral shield that can safeguard soldiers’ humanity through the stresses and losses of war. Arguably, the sword approach is, if necessary, insufficient: the claims of the shield approach must be taken into account. It may seem that a military ethicist could simply employ both approaches in parallel. I will show, however, that the real possibility of conflict between the two approaches, due to their disparity of focus, calls for a more careful reconciliation. I will argue that conceiving military service as a practice in Alasdair MacIntyre's sense makes possible the integration of the central claims of the sword and shield approaches into one coherent and comprehensive military ethic.

Volume

5

Issue

3

Published in

Journal of Military Ethics

Citation/Other Information

Toner, Christopher H. "Military Service as a Practice: Integrating the Sword and Shield Approaches to Military Ethics." Journal of Military Ethics 5, no. 3 (2006): 183-200. https://doi.org/10.1080/15027570600911993

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