If torture actually worked as an interrogation method, there would be a few slim cases where I'd say it would be morally acceptable to torture someone for information. But since it doesn't (turns out that a victim of torture will say literally anything to make it stop, regardless of whether it's true) no. Definitely not.
If torture actually worked as an interrogation method, there would be a few slim cases where I'd say it would be morally acceptable to torture someone for information. But since it doesn't (turns out that a victim of torture will say literally anything to make it stop, regardless of whether it's true) no. Definitely not.