+JMJ+
Yes, it was vague. Maybe we can “flesh” it out a little. I suggest the two old, almost universal principles as starting points, the direct and the inverse “golden rules”, of which I find the inverse rule superior. These are (first the inverse rule):
“Do not do unto others what you would not want them do unto you”.
“Do unto others what you would want them do unto you”.
This is what I mean by respect. I start with respecting others, and as long as they reciprocate it, we are fine. If they do not respect me, then I will stop respecting them.
OK.
I am aware of the “turn the other cheek” principle. Being a mathematician, I
know that this is a bad strategy. It can be proven - mathematically - that the “turn the other cheek” principle is sub-optimal in conflict resolution. Funny thing, if Jesus would have been “God”, he would have known that there are better strategies than that. Much better. But he did not know this. Ergo, he was not God.
There is a problem to your mathematical analysis. Look at the success of the religion that preaches to “turn the other cheek,” that preaches to “rejoice in your afflictions.” This religion is the most prevalent in the world. This religion gave us much…
very much. The remarkable success of the Saints also contradicts your analysis.
Maybe you are right: statistically, the “turn the other cheek” strategy maybe is not the best one. But in the real world, it is. Ergo, the One who promoted it is above statistics: He is God.
Alas, “sacred” is still has religious overtones.
Would you do the honors and define what “dignity” is in this respect?
Now that is surprising. You have to ask me what the dignity of man is in your own morality? You do not believe that humans have an innate value in them?
In the prevailing laws of the society considered. In the medieval Japan, the samurais were allowed to kill any lower class people without impunity.
I think you mean “with impunity.” And the example you gave just shows us how little you think of the value of a human being.
But anyways, you got it backwards. Morality should be the basis of the law of the land, not the other way around. It is like basing the Declaration of Independence on the laws of the United States, instead of the other way around as it is today.
I was sure you would. But I presented it as my view. If we cannot agree then we fail to establish a common ground. Would not be the first time. The real trouble is that if you remove these qualifiers, the definition will be: “The intentional taking of someone else’s life” - and as such self-defense will also be a “murder”, state-sanctioned executions will be murders, too. By the way, I don’t think you reflected on the “scope” of self-defense. Does it stop literally at defending oneself? Or does it extend to defending someone else? These are not trivial questions.
The problem with your qualifiers is that they trivialize killing. “Without their consent…” legitimizes suicide and euthanasia. If I give consent in having myself killed, then it is OK to either kill myself or have someone else kill me. “Without acceptable justification…” who decides that the justification is acceptable?
What you should consider is the use of the word
intention. One may have the grave moral obligation to protect himself or other people from harm, and unfortunately that means he sometimes have to use lethal force.
You have the grave moral obligation to defend yourself from harm; therefore when someone wants to murder you, your primary intention is to render that person unable to harm you. Unfortunately that may sometimes mean you would have to kill him.
A soldier has the grave moral obligation to protect his comrades and the state from the enemy, therefore when he sees the enemy he his primary intention is to render that enemy unable to cause harm. Unfortunately most of the time that means he has to kill the enemy.
The state has the grave moral responsibility to “curb the spread of behavior harmful to people’s rights and to the basic rules of civil society (CCC 2266);” therefore, the state has as its primary intention the punishment of criminals to deter crime. Unfortunately the state may have to execute the criminal.
From these examples, it should be clear that the definition of murder as “The intentional taking of someone else’s life” is already sufficient.
God bless.