Soulmate Gem
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There are three kinds of secrets: natural, promised, and entrusted. This is a broad division and various subdivisions might be introduced under each class. But these subdivisions have no particular moral relevance except under the third class of entrusted secrets.
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Read More »From the entrusted secret, by reason of the onerous contract or quasi contract involved in it, there arises an obligation of strict justice—a grave obligation exgenere suo. This obligation is additional to that which derives from the secret qua natural. Moreover, the preservation of professional secrets is necessary for the common good—to ensure free and confident access to the various levels of professional advice and, therefore, violation of these secrets is also an offense against social or legal justice. Professional secrecy is safeguarded in the provisions of Canon Law. Civil codes also generally grant privilege to at least some kinds of professional secrets. Exceptions to Moral Inviolability. Leaving aside the question of the sacramental seal, which entails a unique inviolability, the obligation that flows from other secrets is not absolute. In general the obligation to observe the secret remains so long as the owner retains his right over it. He may voluntarily forgo this right— provided that doing so does not disproportionately injure others. It is often said that it may be presumed the owner of a secret forgoes his right to it whenever its observance would entail injury or loss to himself. This is certainly a reasonable presumption in regard to natural and promised secrets but it may not always be readily applied in the case of professional secrets because in these there is a nonpersonal factor to be considered, namely, the public good. A person may lose his right to have his secrets conserved. In estimating the cause that involves this loss of right and justifies revelation of a secret, account must be taken of the type of secret in question. The more serious its nature and its content, the more grave must be the cause required to justify its revelation. As a general guiding principle it can be said that the advantage gained from the revelation must always outweigh the loss sustained, with all relevant factors taken into account. This particular type of judgment always demands a delicate assessment of all the values involved. The assessment is particularly difficult in the case of professional secrets, which, in addition to their contractual element, have a great social importance. Yet these secrets are not inviolable. The commonly accepted teaching of moralists is that it is lawful, even obligatory sometimes, to reveal a professional secret if its observance entails grave injury to the common good, to an innocent third party, to the professional person to whom the secret has been entrusted, or to the owner of the secret. But great caution must be exercised in applying these excusing causes. Professional secrecy must be jealously guarded as a feature of civilized living. In the exposition of the excusing causes it would be preferable, and indeed more accurate, to say that the professional secret must be sedulously observed unless its revelation is really necessary to prevent a disproportionately grave injury to the common good, to an innocent third party, to the recipient, or to the owner of the secret. The qualification "disproportionately" is very important, however difficult it may be to apply it, when some imponderable elements are in the issue. The professional secret is in possession, so to speak. It must, therefore, be evident after a careful balancing of all the factors that, as a result of the violation of the professional secret, the benefit accruing to the common good or to the individuals mentioned clearly outweighs the injury done to the personal and social values inherent in this type of secret. In fine, the revelation of a professional secret (apart of course, from the case of the free and justifiable permission of the owner) is lawful only as a last resort, that is, when the revelation is the only available means to prevent serious and imminent injury to the common good or to innocent individuals.
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Read More »Bibliography: thomas aquinas, Summa Theologiae 2a2ae, 70.1. alphonsus liguori, Theologia moralis 3:970–972. b. h. merkelbach, Summa theologiae moralis, 3 v. (8th ed. Paris 1949) 2:852–856. t. a. iorio, Theologia moralis, 3 v. (4th ed. Naples 1953–54) 2:276–283. h. davis, Moral and Pastoral Theology, revised and enlarged by l. w. geddes (New York 1958) 2:422–425. r. e. regan, The Moral Principles Governing Professional Secrecy with an Inquiry into Some of the More Important Professional Secrets (Washington 1941) 20–25, 95–112. n. iung, Dictionnaire de théologie catholique, ed. a. vacant, 15 v. (Paris 1903–50; Tables générales 1951–) 14.2: 1756–64.
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