2017
DOI: 10.1017/s0892679417000430
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Looking Inward Together: Just War Thinking and Our Shared Moral Emotions

Abstract: Just war thinking serves a social and psychological role that international law cannot fill. Law is dispassionate and objective, while just war thinking accounts for emotions and the situatedness of individuals. While law works on us externally, making us accountable to certain people and institutions, just war thinking affects us internally, making us accountable to ourselves. Psychologically, an external focus leads to feelings of shame, while an inward focus generates feelings of guilt. Philosophers have lo… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Let us call this the inward turn , the quest to preserve one’s true self amidst the fury and folie of war, when, as in Zweig’s case, one’s own country no longer welcomes you. Morkevičius (2017) lauds the importance of looking inward when thinking about just war, citing how doing so can, among other things, elucidate the social and psychological impact of war. The process of looking inward is one of grounding, laying bare the situatedness of individuals in war which, she argues, is part of the process of becoming accountable to ourselves for our choices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Let us call this the inward turn , the quest to preserve one’s true self amidst the fury and folie of war, when, as in Zweig’s case, one’s own country no longer welcomes you. Morkevičius (2017) lauds the importance of looking inward when thinking about just war, citing how doing so can, among other things, elucidate the social and psychological impact of war. The process of looking inward is one of grounding, laying bare the situatedness of individuals in war which, she argues, is part of the process of becoming accountable to ourselves for our choices.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%