F
fakename
Guest
It’s an old problem but one that continues to nag me, and it is based on this passage:
“And the servants said to him: Will you that we go and gather it up? And he said: No, lest perhaps gathering up the cockle, you root up the wheat also together with it.”
Now the classical interpretation of this is that if you’ll probably injure or kill an innocent person through punishing others, then you shouldn’t punish them.
The problem of this is that the doctrines on war say that collateral damage is okay. But that seems to go against the rule that says even accidental deaths of innocent people is bad. My only solution to this problem is that the rule doesn’t apply to accidental deaths of innocent people but only intentional deaths.
Any solutions?
“And the servants said to him: Will you that we go and gather it up? And he said: No, lest perhaps gathering up the cockle, you root up the wheat also together with it.”
Now the classical interpretation of this is that if you’ll probably injure or kill an innocent person through punishing others, then you shouldn’t punish them.
The problem of this is that the doctrines on war say that collateral damage is okay. But that seems to go against the rule that says even accidental deaths of innocent people is bad. My only solution to this problem is that the rule doesn’t apply to accidental deaths of innocent people but only intentional deaths.
Any solutions?