What is it about?
How does conscience guide action in contexts of moral conflict? This article reflects on the uses of silence to command truth through a discussion of Thomas More's late letters, focusing on his conflict with King Henry VIII. It also offers a reflection on the importance of silence and conscience in the world today.
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Why is it important?
Conscience is vital to the exercise of moral action. The autonomy of conscience as a self-determined act is threatened by those who intimidate, coerce, and deny the truth to serve their own ends. When persons are pressured to make decisions and act in ways that compromise their values, ideals, and beliefs it is both their wellbeing and their rights that are imperiled. The Renaissance humanist, Thomas More, showed how silence is a powerful tool to frustrate the tyrannical actions of powerful leaders and institutions set on denying the truth and corrupting right action. What is interesting about this case is that More was for many years a close friend and confidant of the very person who would ultimately bring about his persecution and execution, King Henry VIII. It also offers an important precedent for legal debates on the integrity of conscience and the right to silence.
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This page is a summary of: Thomas More's silence and the ethics of conscience, Moreana, December 2019, Edinburgh University Press,
DOI: 10.3366/more.2019.0061.
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