Tanner Lectures, day 1: Arthur Ripstein on rules for wrongdoers

Read the transcript. Subscribe to Berkeley Talks,  a  Berkeley News  podcast that features full-length lectures and conversations at UC Berkeley. For the 2019 Tanner Lectures at UC Berkeley, Arthur Ripstein, a professor of law and philosophy at the University of Toronto, argues that the very thing that makes war wrongful - the fact which side prevails does not depend on who is in the right - also provides the moral standard for evaluating the conduct of war, both the grounds for going to war and the ways in which wars are fought. In the first of three days of lectures and discussions, which took place on April 9-11, Ripstein talks about the rules for wrongdoers. He says, "The thing that's wrong with war is war is the condition in which might makes right. Now, that doesn't mean that no one could every be justified in going to war, but it means that war is always morally problematic. It's morally problematic because who prevails in the war depends on strength and is entirely independent of the merits.
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