Abstract

In part one of this paper I discuss how issues of combatant misconduct and illegality have led military academies to become more focused on professionalism rather than on the tensions between military ethics and military training. In order to interrogate the relationships between training and ethics, between becoming a military professional and being a military professional, between military professionals and society, I turn to the work of Martin Cook, Anthony Hartle, and J. Glenn Gray. In part two I focus on Cook’s analysis of the conflict between the self-understanding and the expected behavior of military professionals. In part three I focus on Hartle’s analysis of how the experience of alienation by military professionals can help to create the culture of military professionals. In part four I introduce a new theory of professionalism based on the existential and phenomenological philosophy of J. Glenn Gray, which can help us to better understand the philosophical and psychological stakes of what it means to become a military professional. I conclude in part five by suggesting that the most pressing issue in the military is not a lack of professionalism, but a lack of trust.

Highlights

  • Ethical and legal violations by military professionals—whether a “tragedy” (Wilson 2008, 33), “highly publicized allegations of unlawful acts” (Mileham 2008, 44), a “scandal” (Cook 2008, 58), a “critical event” (Desjardins 2008, 69), “serious operational incidents” (Cullens 2008, 79), or “military excesses” (Werdelis 2008, 103)—have created a fear that there is a crisis of unprofessionalism pervading the militaries of the Western world

  • In the first section of this paper I argued that what has been seen as a crisis in military professionalism, a crisis due to ethical and legal violations committed by military professionals, required that we interrogate rather than take for granted the relationship between training and ethics in the professionalization process

  • This interrogation was motivated by a concern that there is a tension between ethics and training in the military, a tension between how military professionals are expected to behave and how military professionals do behave, a tension that has led to these ethical and legal violations, and to what has been diagnosed as PTSD

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Summary

Recommended Citation

Nolen (2017) "Military Professionalism and PTSD: On the Need for “Soldier-Artists”," Essays in Philosophy: Vol 18: Iss. 2, Article 4. Essays in Philosophy is a biannual journal published by Pacific University Library | ISSN 1526-0569 | http://commons.pacificu.edu/eip/

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