U
underacloud
Guest
You’re contradicting yourself here. “You didn’t mean it” but “you meant it”.underacloud;11142891:
Your intention doesn’t make them any less dead though does it. Just cause **you didn’t mean it **doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. If you’ve pulled the trigger while aiming at someone, you meant it. The gun didn’t accidentally go off. I can see the value of differentiating it legally but morally they are dead regardless of your intention.No, the means is stopping the aggressor. Their death may be an unfortunate unintended effect. As you say, there is an “acknowledgement of the possibility and probability of a death” (your own words here), which is very different from saying you intended to kill them. Such reasoning falls under double effect.
Look at it this way. If an intruder enters your house, you shoot at him/her as they approach you with likely malice. Having shot them, you look down and see they are still alive. Now, do you shoot them again to finish them off? If the answer is yes, you clearly intended their death. If the answer is no, then you didn’t intend their death and merely used necessary force to protect yourself.
Yes, one can pull a trigger without intending to kill. Police do it all the time and are trained to do so. In deadly situations, it happens to be the case that it is best to aim for the largest part of the aggressor as possible, being their torso. That also happens to be a potentially lethal area of the body to aim at, so death is a possible, but not intended, outcome.
A skilled marksman may be able to disarm/disable an aggressor with precision shooting. Most people are not capable of this and have the best chances of defending themselves or others by aiming for “centre mass”. When police shoot centre mass, they shoot to stop, not shoot to kill.
Again, possible death is acceptable under the principle of double effect. There is no intent to kill, but an acceptance of that possibility.
And again, shooting a gun is a morally neutral activity. It’s morality depends on intent (why you shoot) and circumstances (what you are shooting at). In self defense, the intent is to stop an unjust aggressor, which is morally acceptable.