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題 名 | 亞洲平民如何消失不見:重新思索廣島和長崎原爆的道德爭議=How Asian Civilians Disappeared from View: Reconsidering the Moral Controversy over the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki |
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作 者 | 陳宜中; | 書刊名 | 政治與社會哲學評論 |
卷 期 | 34 2010.09[民99.09] |
頁 次 | 頁145-204 |
分類號 | 592.1 |
關鍵詞 | 日本; 美國; 原爆; 義戰; 華瑟; 羅爾斯; Japan; The US; Atomic bombing; Just war; Walzer; Rawls; |
語 文 | 中文(Chinese) |
中文摘要 | 本文以原爆的道德爭議為題,以美國思想家華瑟(Michael Walzer)和羅爾斯(John Rawls)作為主要探討對象,分析其立基於義戰道德之原爆批判;並從「亞洲平民」的視角對其進行商榷,進而提出另一種可能的思考途徑。華瑟和羅爾斯表示:明知會造成大規模平民死傷的戰爭手段,只有在「極度危急」情況下方可動用,但就美日之間的太平洋戰爭來說,美國從不曾陷入此種境地;再從罪行的輕重程度來看,日軍不可與納粹相提並論,因而美國不該要求日本無條件投降;因此,以屠殺平民的原子彈迫使日本無條件投降,嚴重違反了義戰道德之基本原則。和華瑟、羅爾斯一樣,本文反對以這種或那種國家理由去「合理化」蓄意屠殺平民的戰爭手段;但另一方面,卻也無法完全同意華瑟和羅爾斯的所有論點,因其輕忽了亞洲平民的道德份量,忽視了「制止極嚴重的人道災難」乃義戰道德所規定之重要義務。本文申論指出:今日觀之,「不投原子彈」作為一種選擇,也有其重大的道德損失;因其(以今日的後見之明)相當於選擇了「在日軍已造成的上千萬平民死難之外,還將有數十萬或更多亞洲平民喪生」之後果。 |
英文摘要 | John Rawls criticizes Truman's atomic bomb decision as a very grave moral wrong, while Michael Walzer denies the legitimacy of the atomic bombings as well as the US policy of unconditional surrender. According to Walzer and Rawls, weapons of mass destruction that would knowingly cause a huge number of civilian deaths could only be used under the exceptional condition of "supreme emergency". Given that no "supreme emergency" occurred, or was ever likely to occur, throughout the Pacific War, Truman's atomic choice was almost an absolute wrong judged in terms of just war morality. Or so it is interpreted by Walzer and Rawls. This paper argues, however, that Walzer and Rawls underestimate the very scale and severity of the humanitarian disaster in wartime Asia, the latter being caused chiefly by the war crimes of the Japanese army. To the extent that Walzer and Rawls discount the moral weight of the obligation to stop that humanitarian catastrophe, their total denunciation of the atomic bombings appears to be rather one-sided. The choice not to drop the atomic bombs, so to speak, could not have been made without incurring great moral losses, either. For it would have amounted to letting die another half a million or even more Asian civilians before Japan surrendered. This is not to say that Truman’s atomic decision was therefore morally right. Far from it. Neither the decision to, nor the decision not to, drop the atomic bombs could ever be fully legitimized as "the morally perfect choice" under the moral circumstances then obtaining. |
本系統中英文摘要資訊取自各篇刊載內容。