But it is clearly “morally” bad? It is just not a morally wrong action. Actions are wrong insofar their expected outcomes are bad, but an outcome can be bad without being the result of anyone’s action.
(You might say that morality is only a theory of actions. Then saying that a world, or any outcome, is “morally” bad, would be a category mistake. Fine then, call “ethics” the theory both of good and bad outcomes, and of right and wrong actions. Then a world where everyone suffers is bad, ethically bad.)
An imperfect world might be in various ways, such as being undesirable, but if it is not morally bad, it implies nothing about objective morality.
But it is clearly “morally” bad? It is just not a morally wrong action. Actions are wrong insofar their expected outcomes are bad, but an outcome can be bad without being the result of anyone’s action.
(You might say that morality is only a theory of actions. Then saying that a world, or any outcome, is “morally” bad, would be a category mistake. Fine then, call “ethics” the theory both of good and bad outcomes, and of right and wrong actions. Then a world where everyone suffers is bad, ethically bad.)
No, that’s the point.
Yep, but you still need to show its morally bad even if it is unintentional.