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Does The
End Justify The Means?
by Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D. 
Does the end justify
the means? Can it sometimes be right to use a bad
means to achieve a good end? Don't the conditions
of human life require some shadiness and deceit to
achieve security and
success?
First, let's try to understand the sense in
which the word "justifies" is used in the familiar
statement that "the end justifies the means." After
that we can consider the problem you raise about
whether it is all right to employ any means - good
or bad - so long as the end is good.
When we say that something is "justified," we
are simply saying that it is right. Thus, for
example, when we say that a college is justified in
expelling a student who falls below a passing mark,
we are acknowledging that the college has a right
to set certain standards of performance and to
require its students to meet them. Hence, the
college is right in expelling the student who
doesn't.
Or, to take another example, if a man refuses to
pay a bill for merchandise he did not receive, we
would say that he is justified. He is in the right.
But if a signed receipt can be offered to show that
someone in his family received the merchandise
without informing him, the store would be justified
in demanding payment.
Now, nothing in the world can justify a means
except the end which it is intended to serve. A
means can be right only in relation to an end, and
only by serving that end. The first question to be
asked about something proposed as a way of
achieving any objective whatsoever is always the
same. Will it work? Will this means, if employed,
accomplish the purpose we have in mind? If not, it
is certainly not the right means to use.
But the purpose a man has in mind may be
something as plainly wrong as stealing or murder.
With such an end in view, he may decide that
certain things will help him succeed and others
won't. While he would be right, from the point of
view of mere expediency, in using the former and
not the latter, is he right morally in taking
whatever steps might serve as means to his end? If
not, then he is not morally justified in employing
such means.
This brings us to the heart of the matter. Since
a bad end is one that we are not morally justified
in seeking, we are not morally justified in taking
any steps whatsoever toward its accomplishment.
Hence, no means can be justified - that is, made
morally right - by a bad end.
But how about good ends? We are always morally
justified in working for their accomplishment. Are
we, then, also morally justified in using any means
which will work? The answer to that question is
plainly Yes; for if the end is really good, and if
the means really serves the end and does not defeat
it in any way, then there can be nothing wrong with
the means. It is justified by the end, and we are
justified in using it.
People who are shocked by this statement
overlook one thing: If an action is morally bad in
itself, it cannot really serve a good end, even
though it may on the surface appear to do so. Men
in power have often tried to condone their use of
violence or fraud by making it appear that their
injustice to individuals was for the social good
and was, therefore, justified. But since the good
society involves justice for all, a government
which employs unjust means defeats the end it
pretends to serve. You cannot use bad means for a
good end any more than you can build a good house
out of bad materials.
It is only when we do not look too closely into
the matter that we can be fooled by the statement
that the end justifies the means. We fail to ask
whether the end in view is really good, or we fail
to examine carefully how the means will affect the
end. This happens most frequently in the game of
power politics or in war, where the only criterion
is success and anything which contributes to
success is thought to be justified. Success may be
the standard by which we measure the expediency of
the means, but expediency is one thing and moral
justification is another.
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