What is the difference between murdering and killing. They both result in death... when you are a soldier you know you might end up killing somebody... better, thats part of your training.
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
What is the difference between murdering and killing. They both result in death... when you are a soldier you know you might end up killing somebody... better, thats part of your training.
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
We do not sow.
You kill someone if you happen to be on the road and a suicidal person jumps in front of your car.
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It all depends on who is being killed, and who is doing the killing.
Any specifics you’re thinking of?![]()
Peace in Europe will never stay, because I play Medieval II Total War every day. ~YesDachi
I mean what would you specify as murder and what as killing, do you see any difference at all etc
Originally Posted by Sharrukin
1. Some guy is working on his property digging out his waterline and a neigbours kid falls in and is KILLED. Is that MURDER?
2. Some teenagers out for smoke behind someone's house toss a cigarette that starts a fire, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
3. Some drunk runs a stop sign and plows into another car, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
4. Some woman shoots and KILLS a man attempting to rape her. Is that MURDER?
5. A drafted soldier in Vietnam is in a foxhole and KILLS an enemy soldier coming at him. Is that MURDER?
6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
Yes, there is a difference between KILLING and MURDER. Everything eventually ends in death as we are all going to die anyway. The circumstances do matter!
We do not sow.
I would count "killing" as "manslaughter" not "murder" however thats quite a broad generalisation, because both words are used very vaguely![]()
manslaughter sounds more brutal than murder and killing :P
We do not sow.
Broadly, murder is intentional and/or planned killing when not in defense of other lives.
Well, of the six examples above, I would only call no 6 murder, the definitions I'd use are:
1 - misadventure (possibly negligence depending on fences/warnings etc)
2 - manslaughter
3 - death by dangerous driving (but I've long thought you can get away with murder so long as you do it with a car....) or manslaughter
4 - self-defence, but she has to make a good case for killing as opposed to incapacitating him (ie was HE armed, too?)
5 - line of duty for both soldiers
6 - murder, pure and simple
What makes it murder is an intention to kill someone unlawfully. Manslaughter is death caused whilst attempting to HURT someone unlawfully. I think there's a case to extend manslaughter to include drink driving deaths. My definitions are rough n ready rather than legally sound, btw!
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1) No that is accidental1. Some guy is working on his property digging out his waterline and a neigbours kid falls in and is KILLED. Is that MURDER?
2. Some teenagers out for smoke behind someone's house toss a cigarette that starts a fire, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
3. Some drunk runs a stop sign and plows into another car, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
4. Some woman shoots and KILLS a man attempting to rape her. Is that MURDER?
5. A drafted soldier in Vietnam is in a foxhole and KILLS an enemy soldier coming at him. Is that MURDER?
6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
2) No this is either Manslaughter (un-intentional killing) or negligence
3) Manslaughter
4) Self Defence
5) ... how could this be murder?
6) Murder
Murder is defined as intentionally killing an innocent or defenceless person
manslaughter is unintentionally killing an innocent
everything else is killing for a reason (soldiers and self defence killings fit here)
Was the soldier ordered to kill women and children? If he was then it doesnt really count as murder...6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
Even if he was ordered its a war crime and as such he is guilty of murder
Nuremburg defence won't wash -- still murder, orders or no. But his superiors are ALSO guilty of the murder for issuing those orders.Was the soldier ordered to kill women and children?
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1. accident. Some people would say proper messages could perhaps have been taken to avoid it, but if the person didn't know about it, then he can't be blamed in any way. If he knows about it, but it costs time and money to cover up the hole so nobody can fall down, then according to averages measured in society in industrial production, people think it's unethical if covering up etc. cost less than $200,000,000 per person that died if you didn't cover up, i.e. a human life is on average worth $200,000,000Originally Posted by Sir Moody
2. if they saw it starting to burn when they threw the cigarette, and didn't try to stop it or call the firemen. While I believe you have no duty to actively do good things, if you cause something bad you have a duty to actively compensate it, otherwise you're evil (how evil depends on how much damage you caused, obviously).
3. if you can't drive properly while drunk, or keep yourself from driving when you get drunk, you shouldn't drink. You shouldn't be given a second chance on this one - if you've committed this you should be forbidden from ever drinking again, and punished each time you're seen drunk outside your own house as if you had run over someone while drunk.
4. self-defense, however in law it must be thorougly established that it was rape and not a normal intercourse during with she shot the guy before the woman can be considered innocent.
5. killing in war is a form of self-defense if you look at the situation in itself, but if you fight in a war that is unjust, it's definitely a form of murder. You're however pressured to it in order to get your wage, or pressured to it by conscription. The judgement all comes down to whether the war is justified or not. If it's justified, you're pretty much innocent. If it isn't justified, you're comparable to the man who kills someone because someone else forces you to do so (and whether that is a sin or not is different according to different viewpoints). It all comes down to whether the war in itself is justified or not, and in general is carried out in a way such that it'll achieve a political objective that'll improve the life for many people in the future. If a justified war is fought with massacres and massmurder, then it becomes unjustified because the defeated will not tolerate the outcome, and keep fighting back, starting revenge wars etc., in which case a stable peace can't be met. Because of the difficulty for a regular private to assess this situation, the judgement must be based on what information the soldier had at his disposal when he choose to fight or not fight. Certain news seldom reach the soldiers at the frontline until the end of the war, so the judgement must be milder in practise than in theory.
6. murder
Under construction...
"In countries like Iran, Saudi Arabia and Norway, there is no separation of church and state." - HoreTore
I would say:
Murder you kill someone who isn't able to defend himself.
Killing you kill someone who is able to defend himself AND poses a threat at the same time.
These are rough examples. You could say someone with a gun in his hand is a threat, but imo only if he aims at you and is pulling the trigger. Generally speaking all killing in war is killing. But personally I would call the bombings of Guernica, Rotterdam, Warschaw, Dresden, etc murder.
Murder is when you walk into a school and start shooting around. Murder is My Lai, or Sebrenica. Most of the killing can be considered as murder imo, but there are example were you can call it killing.
Writing this was very confusing btw
as for these:1. Some guy is working on his property digging out his waterline and a neigbours kid falls in and is KILLED. Is that MURDER?
2. Some teenagers out for smoke behind someone's house toss a cigarette that starts a fire, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
3. Some drunk runs a stop sign and plows into another car, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
4. Some woman shoots and KILLS a man attempting to rape her. Is that MURDER?
5. A drafted soldier in Vietnam is in a foxhole and KILLS an enemy soldier coming at him. Is that MURDER?
6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
1. Killing, accident
2. Killing, tho he's more guilty then the man at the waterline
3. since he's drunk Murder, it isn't allowed to be that drunk
4. Murder, Gun arms are not allowed
5. Killing, it's war, soldiers are trained to kill and die
6. Murder, since these were defenceless people
Last edited by Stig; 10-03-2006 at 16:28.
That stuff about obeying orders making you murderer (and the superior quite often being considered innocent) is pretty odd really, considering that the man giving the order has all the power to issue the order and threaten to kill the lower ranked if he doesn't obey the orders. As such, the superior has a much greater responsibility and must have more reponsibility for the actual atrocity. Whether the one obeying orders is innocent or not is another matter which I won't discuss here, but at least shouldn't the superior be considered worse than the one who executes the order, because by holding his position of power he commits not one but 2 sins:Originally Posted by Sir Moody
1. murdering the victim - he knows the victim will die when he issues the order, because the private is afraid of getting shot if he doesn't obey, and if the first private refuses and he shoots the first private, he asks another, etc. and he will statistically be almost 100% sure that the victim will die. It's only a matter of wordplay that would make him innocent of the murder
2. he puts the private into a position where he can choose between murdering (maybe also being arrested and punished if they lose the war), or being murdered. Causing such a dilemma, such fear, and forcing another man to get a third man's life on his conscience is no doubt a sin.
so no matter what happens the superior who gives the order will be responsible for ruining not one but two lives (or possibly even more if he has to massacre several privates who refuse to obey orders).
Last edited by Rodion Romanovich; 10-03-2006 at 16:34.
Under construction...
"In countries like Iran, Saudi Arabia and Norway, there is no separation of church and state." - HoreTore
The superior is guilty of a war crime too (in this case ordering it) so all parties involved would be guilty
you can't have manslaughter without LAUGHTER!!!!!
Baby Quit Your Cryin' Put Your Clown Britches On!!!
Last I checked, there weren't any lessons in dying...Originally Posted by Stig
Yeah you don't have to learn dying, it's pretty easy they sayOriginally Posted by Somebody Else
I meant that they know they can die doing their job, unless you're Dutch ofcourse, any proper Dutch soldier resigns from the army if he's about to be send into war![]()
Here's the thing though - no soldier can choose not to fight in an 'unjustified' war (whatever the hell that is supposed to be) since:
1. Justification of war is a point of view and not an absolute.
2. If the soldier refused to go he can/will be court martialled and face dishonourable dishcharge/prison/execution for anything from derelection of duty to desertion depending on what army he is in, something a lot of moronic 'protestors' who assault soldiers while convalescing or who returned from a conflict fail to realise. As a soldier, you do not choose where and when to fight, or what to fight for, it's the civil government that chooses.
Well that’s not completely true. “just following orders” does not justify all actions.Originally Posted by Grey_Fox
Peace in Europe will never stay, because I play Medieval II Total War every day. ~YesDachi
I'm a little confused because you lump the first 2 examples in as killing, though they don't fit your definition of killing (ie, you kill someone who is able to defend himself AND poses a threat at the same time. How were the kid and the person burned by the fire posing a threat to the man digging the hole or the smoking teens?Originally Posted by Stig
Also, #4 you call murder because 'Gun arms are not allowed.' I do not know what you mean by this. Is it a local law where you live that you're referring to? A larger ethical standpoint? If so wouldn't that make the soldiers' killing in war also murder, if they used guns to do the killing? Does this mean self-defense from rape using a knife to kill the man would have been just killing, whereas the gun made it murder? Very confusing statement.
Ajax
Last edited by ajaxfetish; 10-03-2006 at 19:45.
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"I do not yet know how chivalry will fare in these calamitous times of ours." --- Don Quixote
"I have no words, my voice is in my sword." --- Shakespeare
"I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it." --- Jack Handey
As I see it, the morality of going to war is not the responsibility of the soldier, it is his conduct within the war. So, if the war is judged to be unjust at the end of it (ie. they lose) then the soldier is not guilty of a crime - he went to war, and perhaps killed someone perfectly legally. However, if he forced a PoW to bomb up a magazine for him, he's guilty of a war crime, even if his CO ordered him to.
Never claimed it did. However somebody posted above that taking part in an unjust war is illegal. I'm saying that if the civil government orders an army to go to war and a soldier refuses, he is committing an illegal act, whether the war is 'justified' or not, and there is no escaping that fact.Originally Posted by yesdachi
Yes it does, at least fora rank 'n' file soldier, he is ordered to kill civilians, he has no choice, therefore its not his fault, he still murders them, but his superioir who gave the order is fully responsible, if the soldier killed civilians wihtout orders, then its his bad.Originally Posted by yesdachi
- The justification of the war is seperate to the actions within a war.
Open some good dictionary like Oxford or Cambridge. I already explained that in Monastery.Originally Posted by The Stranger
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Dictionary definitions are great for unfamiliar words, clarifying a word when confused about its usage, or numerous other things, but they are not the final answer on philosophical issues such as this. Definitions have to be decided by argument and concensus; such things do not end when a definition is published.
Ajax
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"I do not yet know how chivalry will fare in these calamitous times of ours." --- Don Quixote
"I have no words, my voice is in my sword." --- Shakespeare
"I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it." --- Jack Handey
1. Some guy is working on his property digging out his waterline and a neigbours kid falls in and is KILLED. Is that MURDER?
No. Possibly negligence, it was his own property but perhaps he should have foreseen that the neighbouring kids would venture into his garden.
2. Some teenagers out for smoke behind someone's house toss a cigarette that starts a fire, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
Negligence at best, and in Dutch law quite possibly "dood door schuld" (wich I understand overlaps with the Anglo-American "manslaughter")
3. Some drunk runs a stop sign and plows into another car, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
Of course not murder. Again "dood door schuld".
4. Some woman shoots and KILLS a man attempting to rape her. Is that MURDER?
Not murder in any circumstance. However there's the question wether it was necessary to kill the guy.
5. A drafted soldier in Vietnam is in a foxhole and KILLS an enemy soldier coming at him. Is that MURDER?
Nope.
6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
This is the only one that qualifies as murder.
Originally Posted by Grey_Fox
Wich is why Israel's "Black flag" concept, while noble, is also a complete farce.
Killing is a fact, a verb, something that happens with no emotion applyed to it. Murder Has emotion attached to it, it has the general rules of morality attached to it. A soldier can kill an insurgent and to his side he's done only that, he's killed an insurgent. To a sympathizer he's a murderer. Killing becomes murder when you attach morality and emotion to it. That is the difference
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Wine is a bit different, as I am sure even kids will like it.
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1. Some guy is working on his property digging out his waterline and a neigbours kid falls in and is KILLED. Is that MURDER?
Negligence (maybe less depending on saftey precautions)
2. Some teenagers out for smoke behind someone's house toss a cigarette that starts a fire, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
Manslaughter
3. Some drunk runs a stop sign and plows into another car, KILLING someone. Is that MURDER?
Manslaughter
4. Some woman shoots and KILLS a man attempting to rape her. Is that MURDER?
Self-Defence, albeit extreme
5. A drafted soldier in Vietnam is in a foxhole and KILLS an enemy soldier coming at him. Is that MURDER?
Not murder
6. A soldier at the village of My Lai guns down women and children as they try to run, KILLING them. Is that MURDER?
If the soldier is ordered to do it, then no,
If the soldier isnt under orders to kill civilians then yes, it is murder
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