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Death is not always suicide.
I think the implications you are making about this brush upon the moral responsibility regarding death in wartime. What is being stated is that the moral responsibility falls on the participant of war for being in war. And since war in and of itself is a hazardous, dangerous, and often times fatal venture, that one's decision to go to war automatically makes them responsible for what happens while they are there. So when one loses a leg - that is self-mutilation. In the same way, when one dies on the battlefield - it is suicide
Although this is an interesting point, I do not agree with it entirely. I think the name for death in wartime is simply "death" or if you want to be even more specific it could be called a "casualty." So you can say "deaths" or "casualties" but just do not say suicide - that is when one's own person makes the autonomous decision to remove the living qualities from their being. -
awm___Quack wrote: »
Death is not always suicide.
I think the implications you are making about this brush upon the moral responsibility regarding death in wartime. What is being stated is that the moral responsibility falls on the participant of war for being in war. And since war in and of itself is a hazardous, dangerous, and often times fatal venture, that one's decision to go to war automatically makes them responsible for what happens while they are there. So when one loses a leg - that is self-mutilation. In the same way, when one dies on the battlefield - it is suicide
Although this is an interesting point, I do not agree with it entirely. I think the name for death in wartime is simply "death" or if you want to be even more specific it could be called a "casualty." So you can say "deaths" or "casualties" but just do not say suicide - that is when one's own person makes the autonomous decision to remove the living qualities from their being.
Yes
Msg2short -
awm___Quack wrote: »
Death is not always suicide.
I think the implications you are making about this brush upon the moral responsibility regarding death in wartime. What is being stated is that the moral responsibility falls on the participant of war for being in war. And since war in and of itself is a hazardous, dangerous, and often times fatal venture, that one's decision to go to war automatically makes them responsible for what happens while they are there. So when one loses a leg - that is self-mutilation. In the same way, when one dies on the battlefield - it is suicide
Although this is an interesting point, I do not agree with it entirely. I think the name for death in wartime is simply "death" or if you want to be even more specific it could be called a "casualty." So you can say "deaths" or "casualties" but just do not say suicide - that is when one's own person makes the autonomous decision to remove the living qualities from their being.
Did you copy and paste that?
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