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Author Topic: Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?  (Read 2477 times)

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Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?
« on: June 27, 2009, 02:23:37 AM »
Objection 1. It would seem that it is not unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions. For suspicion is seemingly an uncertain opinion about an evil, wherefore the Philosopher states (Ethic. vi, 3) that suspicion is about both the true and the false. Now it is impossible to have any but an uncertain opinion about contingent singulars. Since then human judgment is about human acts, which are about singular and contingent matters, it seems that no judgment would be lawful, if it were not lawful to judge from suspicions.

Objection 2. Further, a man does his neighbor an injury by judging him unlawfully. But an evil suspicion consists in nothing more than a man's opinion, and consequently does not seem to pertain to the injury of another man. Therefore judgment based on suspicion is not unlawful.

Objection 3. Further, if it is unlawful, it must needs be reducible to an injustice, since judgment is an act of justice, as stated above (Article 1). Now an injustice is always a mortal sin according to its genus, as stated above (Question 59, Article 4). Therefore a judgment based on suspicion would always be a mortal sin, if it were unlawful. But this is false, because "we cannot avoid suspicions," according to a gloss of Augustine (Tract. xc in Joan.) on 1 Corinthians 4:5, "Judge not before the time." Therefore a judgment based on suspicion would seem not to be unlawful.

On the contrary, Chrysostom [Hom. xvii in Matth. in the Opus Imperfectum falsely ascribed to St. John of the Cross] in comment on the words of Matthew 7:1, "Judge not," etc., says: "By this commandment our Lord does not forbid Christians to reprove others from kindly motives, but that Christian should despise Christian by boasting his own righteousness, by hating and condemning others for the most part on mere suspicion."

I answer that, As Tully says (De Invent. Rhet. ii), suspicion denotes evil thinking based on slight indications, and this is due to three causes. First, from a man being evil in himself, and from this very fact, as though conscious of his own wickedness, he is prone to think evil of others, according to Ecclesiastes 10:3, "The fool when he walketh in the way, whereas he himself is a fool, esteemeth all men fools." Secondly, this is due to a man being ill-disposed towards another: for when a man hates or despises another, or is angry with or envious of him, he is led by slight indications to think evil of him, because everyone easily believes what he desires. Thirdly, this is due to long experience: wherefore the Philosopher says (Rhet. ii, 13) that "old people are very suspicious, for they have often experienced the faults of others." The first two causes of suspicion evidently connote perversity of the affections, while the third diminishes the nature of suspicion, in as much as experience leads to certainty which is contrary to the nature of suspicion. Consequently suspicion denotes a certain amount of vice, and the further it goes, the more vicious it is.

Now there are three degrees of suspicion. The first degree is when a man begins to doubt of another's goodness from slight indications. This is a venial and a light sin; for "it belongs to human temptation without which no man can go through this life," according to a gloss on 1 Corinthians 4:5, "Judge not before the time." The second degree is when a man, from slight indications, esteems another man's wickedness as certain. This is a mortal sin, if it be about a grave matter, since it cannot be without contempt of one's neighbor. Hence the same gloss goes on to say: "If then we cannot avoid suspicions, because we are human, we must nevertheless restrain our judgment, and refrain from forming a definite and fixed opinion." The third degree is when a judge goes so far as to condemn a man on suspicion: this pertains directly to injustice, and consequently is a mortal sin.

Reply to Objection 1. Some kind of certainty is found in human acts, not indeed the certainty of a demonstration, but such as is befitting the matter in point, for instance when a thing is proved by suitable witnesses.

Reply to Objection 2. From the very fact that a man thinks evil of another without sufficient cause, he despises him unduly, and therefore does him an injury.

Reply to Objection 3. Since justice and injustice are about external operations, as stated above (58, 8,10,11; 59, 1, ad 3), the judgment of suspicion pertains directly to injustice when it is betrayed by external action, and then it is a mortal sin, as stated above. The internal judgment pertains to justice, in so far as it is related to the external judgment, even as the internal to the external act, for instance as desire is related to fornication, or anger to murder.

Summa Theologica, II-II, Q. 60, A. 3.

Offline CM

Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?
« Reply #1 on: June 27, 2009, 08:49:57 AM »


Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?
« Reply #2 on: June 27, 2009, 09:03:37 AM »
This is so difficult!  Certain behaviors, attitudes,etc. nearly always lend themselves to being unsafe around children.  Yet we are not supposed to think ill of our fellow Catholic.  We are not supposed to harbor evil suspicion, and if it is unfounded, we have made a mortal sin.

Caminus, the Angelic Doctor is so hard for me to understand!

But I take his point in reference to declarations about the Church, but in personal Mommy things....So is he talking about Legal, Formal Judgement in a formal inquiry?


Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?
« Reply #3 on: June 27, 2009, 01:01:02 PM »
Quote from: Elizabeth
This is so difficult!  Certain behaviors, attitudes,etc. nearly always lend themselves to being unsafe around children.  Yet we are not supposed to think ill of our fellow Catholic.  We are not supposed to harbor evil suspicion, and if it is unfounded, we have made a mortal sin.

Caminus, the Angelic Doctor is so hard for me to understand!

But I take his point in reference to declarations about the Church, but in personal Mommy things....So is he talking about Legal, Formal Judgement in a formal inquiry?



Behaviors and attitudes are things, not persons and are to be judged in light of what we know to be good and true.  On the other hand, Thomas is referring to judging and condemning the person of a man based upon slight indications.  That doesn't mean we shouldn't judge what he says and does, according to what is necessary and within our competency, and act accordingly e.g. by avoiding the person.  Suspicion is evil thinking of the man based upon slight indications.  There's alot of that going around and is the reason why I posted this article.      

Whether it is unlawful to form a judgment from suspicions?
« Reply #4 on: June 27, 2009, 01:05:28 PM »
"Since justice and injustice are about external operations, as stated above (58, 8,10,11; 59, 1, ad 3), the judgment of suspicion pertains directly to injustice when it is betrayed by external action, and then it is a mortal sin, as stated above."

Judgment becomes a mortal sin "when betrayed by external action."  Caminus would seem to be reminding us that posting on CathInfo is an external action.  And he would seem to be implying that we are judgmental here on CathInfo.

I have been coming to the same conclusion in my mind and it's why I have stopped saying that Lefebvre may have been intentionally deceiving people.  I don't think I ever said that he flat-out WAS intentionally deceiving people, but it's possible I did.  

I did flat-out say that Malachi Martin and David Hobson were con men but I doubt this was a mortal sin -- because at the time I didn't know it was and thus it was not willful.  Now I do and must be more careful.  I'll choose my words more carefully and say "I don't entirely trust them."

But if this was posted to make us feel guilty about "judging" Ratzinger and the VII Popes, uh... What Catholic Martyr said.  We point to their actions, their words and their encyclicals.  What they do in the external forum -- their apostate acts -- precludes even the necessity of guesswork about their internal intentions.

We live in a time of paranoia, and it makes you prematurely like the naturally suspicious old person that Aquinas speaks of.