Abstract: This paper critically examines the social justice aphorism “impact over intent” through the lens of moral philosophy, with specific attention to its implications for music education discourse. As an expression that has increasingly gained traction in music education, “impact over intent” challenges individuals to prioritize the external effects of their actions over the internal motivations that drive them. This raises a fundamental moral question: should ethics be rooted in outcomes or motivations? I explore the aphorism through various moral frameworks—including utilitarianism, deontology, virtue ethics, and care ethics—highlighting their interpretations and constraints in addressing the relationship between outcomes and motives. Recognizing the limitations of traditional moral theories, which tend to adopt atomistic, agent-centered approaches, I engage José Medina’s structural approach to virtue ethics, which integrates traditional virtue ethics with anticolonial, antiracist, and feminist epistemologies. Medina emphasizes correcting the meta-level motivations that sustain active ignorance, advocating for meta-lucidity—a structural motivation to develop critical consciousness toward the historical and socio-political dimensions of injustice. Meta-lucidity reframes the “impact vs. intent” debate by addressing the structural motivations that perpetuate harm. By situating “impact over intent” across various ethical frameworks, I highlight the importance of connecting moral philosophy to social justice efforts in music education.
William J. Coppola (Thu,) studied this question.