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Murder and unlawful killing

Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 03:02 4050 views 21 comments
This may seem like a strange topic

Murder is usually defined as unlawful killing.

This to me suggests that murder only exists in the formal legal sense and there is no other sense to distinguish murder from any other kind killing such accidentally causing a death, killing in self defence or animal slaughter.

Therefore in a society or space without laws someone's death at the hands of another has no special feature to distinguish it from a death per se.

This suggests that murder doesn't really exist unless you accept societies moral evaluations.

I don't know what conclusion to draw but it suggests either there is a "non physical" realm of values or an absence of general values and or a mental imposition of values on a neutral phenomena.

Comments (21)

Benkei February 19, 2022 at 08:42 #656661
Reply to Andrew4Handel That's not the full definition of murder which you need to distinguish it from other types of unlawful killing. The distinctions are legal and therefore have primarily legal effect.

Layman usage is pretty close to the legal meaning though and I'm pretty confident that societies without laws still can tell the difference between a natural death and someone dying from a knife in his back.

If your point is words mean what people agree what they mean then yes.
javi2541997 February 19, 2022 at 08:55 #656664
Quoting Andrew4Handel
Therefore in a society or space without laws someone's death at the hands of another has no special feature to distinguish it from a death per se.


I think not. You are just misunderstanding the typified crime in a code book with the act per se. One precedes to the other. This is why lawmakers tend to modify the laws, with the act of making an order to all the thing that could happen in a society.

Quoting Benkei
societies without laws still can tell the difference between a natural death and someone dying from a knife in his back.


Absolutely. But I guess that it is important to have some laws working on the state. This makes a safety feeling when an issue arises. For example:
You and me make an agreement about purchasing a home. It would be more safe if we have a civil code to look at and a public record to check what is going on with the house.
Agent Smith February 19, 2022 at 10:38 #656670
Reply to Andrew4Handel Yes, been mulling over this a while. Suicide, for instance, give it some thought, isn't actually suicide in the sense a person killed himself/herself. Any evidence? Well, someone can murder you and make it look like suicide; see?

Also, I don't believe anyone dies of "old age".

:grin: I'm going to end my own life. :wink: :wink: nudge, nudge! To further complicate my passing, I'm old enough to die of (ahem, koff, koff) "natural causes" :grin:
Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 15:45 #656720
Quoting javi2541997
I think not. You are just misunderstanding the typified crime in a code book with the act per se. One precedes to the other.


Murder is defined as unlawful killing so the law is deciding which acts should be described as murder. In some cases abortion is claimed to be murder. But the death penalty is not considered murder.

The act of killing someone is not what makes something murder. You can kill in self defence, in abortion you can kill someone by accident. So the legal statement is the only thing making something a murder.

For example some philosophers and psychologists and scientist believe we have no freewill and due to laws of causality our actions are predetermined by natural forces therefore nothing could be described as murder and we are essentially robots carrying out our programming.

For something to be proven to be murder you have to prove issues like freewill and mental intention.

Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 15:55 #656723
Quoting Benkei
Layman usage is pretty close to the legal meaning though and I'm pretty confident that societies without laws still can tell the difference between a natural death and someone dying from a knife in his back.


As I said to in my last post to Javi killing someone does not entail murder or intent.

Someone could be shot in war, in self defence , in a hunting accident, by suicide, by a mad man etc. The dead body looks the same.

The attitude we have towards things classified murder however is that of a terrible crime and we don't usually have this response to lawful killing such as war and self defence.

What strikes me is that we have an ethical plane of perception where we perceive the world under a lens of ethical, emotional resonance which makes certain acts seem desirable or undesirable etc whether or not they actually are. For example in some countries and among some people homosexual acts are seen as a terrible and people are still executed for them in places like Iran.

This moral perception is very compelling and motivating but it may be illusory.

Unless you want to say our perception of an event as criminal and malicious etc is tapping into some real domain of reality where ethics/values exist concretely.

As an antinatalist/anti-harm person I view so called natural harm as as bad and as harmful as behaviour deliberately carried out by humans. That is what you might say is described as natural evil. If nature is not evil and we are just another part of nature that makes us not suitable moral agents.

Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 15:58 #656724
Quoting Agent Smith
Yes, been mulling over this a while. Suicide, for instance, give it some thought, isn't actually suicide in the sense a person killed himself/herself.


What about someone driven to suicide by bullying and harassment or bad parenting?

You don't actual have to strike a fatal blow to be accused of causing or arranging a persons death.

Americans like to say guns don't kill people people kill people. make of that what you will.
Hanover February 19, 2022 at 16:00 #656725
Quoting Andrew4Handel
Murder is usually defined as unlawful killing.


It can be, or you might create a term for an unethical killing. That is, it is possible to condemn a particular type of killing without laws while finding other forms accepted.

That seems the ancient use. Cain's murder of Abel was condemned prior to any law being given.
javi2541997 February 19, 2022 at 16:01 #656726
Quoting Andrew4Handel
For something to be proven to be murder you have to prove issues like freewill and mental intention.


Yes, I am agree with you. Mental intention is important to classify an act as a murder. But I guess all are important but different. I can kill someone with intention (for example, revenge) or accidentally (car crash). But both would have their legal procedures. One is not "better" or "more important" than the other.
Benkei February 19, 2022 at 16:27 #656732
Quoting Andrew4Handel
As I said to in my last post to Javi killing someone does not entail murder or intent.

Someone could be shot in war, in self defence , in a hunting accident, by suicide, by a mad man etc. The dead body looks the same.


Which is why you look for other evidence to prove intent.
Agent Smith February 19, 2022 at 16:27 #656733
Quoting Andrew4Handel
What about someone driven to suicide by bullying and harassment or bad parenting?


No comment!

Quoting Andrew4Handel
You don't actual have to strike a fatal blow to be accused of causing or arranging a persons death.


Just "contribute" in your own little way, yes!

Quoting Andrew4Handel
Americans like to say guns don't kill people people kill people. make of that what you will.


A gun merely increases the number of successful attempts (at offing someone).
Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 17:18 #656742
Quoting Benkei
Which is why you look for other evidence to prove intent.


Looking for intent is speculating about the content of someone's mind (non physical I would/symbolic?) Not analysing the crime scene.

I don't think that if someone intended to kill someone they intended to do so unlawfully.

I can't remember if this dilemma had a name in moral philosophy but does not committing an act imply you don't think it is wrong. Actions speak louder as words as they say.

I think a murder is considered as such if the motivations are suspected to be malicious. But you could view all killing as wrong simply on the basis of harm.

Speculating about peoples moral motives is tricky.
Benkei February 19, 2022 at 20:52 #656807
Quoting Andrew4Handel
Looking for intent is speculating about the content of someone's mind (non physical I would/symbolic?) Not analysing the crime scene.


Nonsense. Intent can be deduced from circumstances and isn't speculation or you wouldn't ever be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt someone murdered another. Think of preparatory acts, like buying the murder weapon, lying in wait, etc.
L'éléphant February 19, 2022 at 21:06 #656816
Quoting Benkei
Think of preparatory acts, like buying the murder weapon, lying in wait, etc.

You mean premeditation.
Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 22:55 #656848
Quoting Benkei
Nonsense. Intent can be deduced from circumstances and isn't speculation or you wouldn't ever be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt someone murdered another. Think of preparatory acts, like buying the murder weapon, lying in wait, etc.


"When a defendant is charged with a criminal offence, the prosecution must prove that the defendant both committed the act ('actus reus'), and had the required mental element of intent ('mens rea'). The mental element is that the defendant intended or foresaw the natural consequences of the actus reus".

https://www.inbrief.co.uk/court-proceedings/proving-intention-to-commit-a-crime/#:~:text=When%20a%20defendant%20is%20charged,consequences%20of%20the%20actus%20reus.
Andrew4Handel February 19, 2022 at 23:01 #656853
Murder only appears to have a legal definition as an unlawful killing.

If a killing was lawful then calling it a murder would be describing something else (see the execution of gays in Iran.) I would apply this to many other things including theft and marriage.

Murder is described as an unlawful killing not an unethical one. The Bible itself has unethical killing like disproportionate punishments, a child sacrifice and genocidal actions (collective punishments) and God's whims.

I don't think an act reveals its ethical or criminal status without perspective in the same way all perception can be argued to be transformative and constructing concepts rather than direct perception.
Outlander February 19, 2022 at 23:13 #656856
Is procreating and willfully bringing a child into this world, a situation rather, in which their outcome is grim to be called murder, manslaughter, or simple ignorance?

Should it be punished? If so, how?

Law of man is little more than opinion enforced by action that makes one unable to protest or circumvent it, often through inability to even experience or process it, ie. death or incarceration. This changes quite often throughout the course of time. In the scope of this argument, primary use and position of the terms "lawful" or "unlawful" is murder toward any further discussion. The real question is, would this be lawful or unlawful?
Hanover February 20, 2022 at 02:13 #656882
Quoting Andrew4Handel
Looking for intent is speculating about the content of someone's mind (non physical I would/symbolic?) Not analysing the crime scene.


Sometimes people admit to others their intent.
Andrew4Handel February 20, 2022 at 05:24 #656897
Quoting Hanover
Sometimes people admit to others their intent.


Does that take the diagnosis of murder out of the mental realm?

My point has roughly been that values seem to only exist in a mental realm and that the appearance of a wrong doing could be how we are defining a murder but in essence it is just an unlawful killing
.
So much other killing and harm goes on.

In this sense I would be supporting a model of social fictions motivating people.

Quoting Hanover
Cain's murder of Abel


It wasn't explicitly described as a murder in Genesis (God hadn't laid out his commandments at that stage) and interestingly it didn't incur the death penalty. The use of the death penalty for much more than killing someone including consensual sex acts, money laundering and pick pocketing really makes the whole history of criminal justice a bizarre farce.
Benkei February 20, 2022 at 15:03 #656983
Reply to Andrew4Handel always fun if people quote things without understanding that what I said already covered this objection. How do people prove mens rea today? We're not guessing or assuming anything about people's mental states, we prove them beyond a reasonable doubt.
Andrew4Handel February 20, 2022 at 18:24 #657010
Reply to Benkei You should have followed the trial of Travis Reinking like I did.

"Due to severe schizophrenia, Reinking was initially found incompetent to stand trial and committed to a mental hospital for treatment.[9] Later that decision was changed and Reinking was put on trial forfour counts of first degreepremeditated murder on January 31, 2022. He was convicted of the charges on February 4, 2022."#

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nashville_Waffle_House_shooting

He was convicted of murder despite being severely mentally ill and delusional and being heavily medicated during his trial and looking very ill.

There was plenty of evidence presented by the defence of his deranged mental state including him writing a letter to Oprah Winfrey claiming he was being stalked by Taylor Swift. The defence presented two psychiatrists who had diagnosed his illness and the prosecution could not present one mental health expert witness to dispute this instead they relied on the police on the day he was arrested/captured claiming he seemed sane to them.

Then the prosecution lawyers questioned the psychiatrists and they said insane illogical stuff like that Travis claimed God told him to kill 3 people but 4 people were killed so he must of been insane. That he fled the scene of the crime so he must have known what he did was wrong. Travis did the shooting naked but for a short coat.

It is kind of infuriating that you don't know this kind of thing about the justice system. People are rampantly speculating about hidden mental states and motives.

My position does not hinge on the idea that the criminal justice system is in anyway good or infallible but quite the reverse. Your position appears to hinge on some kind of notion of infallible common sense.
Benkei February 21, 2022 at 06:06 #657186
Reply to Andrew4Handel Oh my, a court case you don't agree with. What are we ever to do? Don't give a shit about anecdotal stories when it's clear it's rather easy in most cases to deduce someone's motives from their actions. Your OP isn't about discovering which conclusions you think you can make from your erroneous framing but you trying to defend a pet theory that had no bearing on reality. But then, I already knew you were batshit insane from the changing sex thread, so I'm done. Bye!