| A | B |
| Just cause | War is permissible to protect innocent life, to preserve conditions necessary for decent human existence and to secure human rights |
| Competent authority | War must be declared by those with responsibility for public order not individuals or private groups. |
| Comparative justice | No party in a dispute can assume that it has “absolute justice” on its side. |
| Right intention | War can be legitimately intended only for the reasons set forth above as just cause. Once a conflict has begun, right intention means that peace and reconciliation must continue to be pursued |
| Last resort | It can be justified only if all peaceful alternatives to war have been exhausted. |
| Probability of success | Irrational resort to force or hopeless resistance must be prevented when the outcome will clearly be disproportionate or futile. |
| Proportionality | The damage inflicted and the costs incurred by war must be proportionate to the good expected by taking up arms. |
| moral guidance | The Just War Theory give us _____ |
| guarantee | Just War Theory cannot _____ war will be avoided |
| seven | All _______ of the Just War criteria must be met for a war to be just |
| worship Roman gods | Early Christians refused to service in the military because they would have to |
| maintain, not expand the empire | Christians began to serve in the military to |
| Diocletian | This man refused to allow Christians in the military |
| defend themselves agains violence | Augustine said that Christians could NOT |
| use violence to defend the innocent against evil | Augustine said that Christians could |
| Augustine | He first developed the Just War Theory |
| crusaders | people who fought wars for religious reasons |
| conscientious objection | The US allows for two types of |
| Selective objectors | A person only willing to fight in a war they think is just |
| women | _______ don't have register for the draft. |
| nuclear pacifists | people who refuse to fight in a war that may use certain weapons |
| noncombatant conscientious objectors | people who are opposed to killing in war, but will perform noncombat duties |
| 5 yrs. in prison, $250,000 fine | The consequences for failure to register for the draft include |