from Part II - Approaches to Christian ethics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2012
While it would be an overstatement to say that there are as many liberation theologies as there are practitioners, it is certainly true that liberation theology is not all of a piece. This is not just to point to the varieties of liberation theology – black, Asian, African, Jewish, feminist, womanist and so forth – but to the variety of standpoints even within Latin America, where the movement started. Juan Luis Segundo, for example, had an essentially evolutionary understanding of reality that he shared with his fellow Jesuit, Teilhard de Chardin. He can cite with approval the view that every vice was probably at some time a virtue, and that what we call ‘human beings’ are only slowly emerging from the tangle of primitive drives and instincts. He frankly avows a situation ethic, an ethic in which the ends justify the means, but on the understanding that Christian ends are the most communitarian and generous-hearted imaginable. José Míguez Bonino, on the other hand, offers us a survey of twentieth-century social ethics, but allows himself to formulate a principle that is virtually identical with utilitarianism: ‘The basic ethical criterion is the maximizing of universal human possibilities and the minimizing of human costs.’ Any economist would recognise this as a version of Pareto optimality. Enrique Dussel, for his part, who represents an appropriation of the work of Levinas long before that thinker became fashionable in Europe, describes ethics as ‘fundamental theology’, that which constitutes both the rationality and the possibility of theology.
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