Abstract
Contemporary philosophers see patriotism primarily as an attachment to a country expressed in the form of personal loyalty and special concern for that country. But some philosophers believe that patriotism is constituted by a constancy in love for one’s patria. The latter form of patriotism, it is argued here, provides reasons for fighting and killing in defense of one’s patria which the former does not. Thus a loving patriot’s killing of armed invaders of her patria is, it is argued, analogous to killing in self-defense in at least the following two aspects: the armed invaders force the patriot to kill them (i.e., she has no option but to kill) and, in defending her patria, the loving patriot is defending something she considers as valuable as her own life. Against Rodin it is argued that threats to the existence of one’s patria are not easily removable conditional threats analogous to armed extortion of money; and against McMahon, it is argued that killing soldiers in pursuit of a just cause whose invasion still threatens the existence of a patria is not analogous to a (impermissible) murder of a police officer attempting to kill a criminal.
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Pavković, A. (2017). Killing and Dying for One’s Country. In: Sardoc, M. (eds) Handbook of Patriotism. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30534-9_28-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-30534-9_28-1
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