2 responses to “Harvard Justice: Lecture 1 – Murder and Cannibalism”

  1. If you want to answer the question “Why is murder wrong?”, maybe you need to define “murder” first? The Oxford dictionary syas that murder “is the unlawful premeditated killing of one human being by another”. The important part of that is unlawful – immediately that is enough reason for deontologists (many people) to say that murder is wrong. If you define murder as “killing”, that distinction is not so clear.

    Revisiting the original question, I’ve realised it is actually a loaded question – it is not asking whether murder is wrong, it is stating that it is wrong, and asking for what reason it is.

    As a consequentialist I’d argue that murder is not always wrong, if it is committed for the greater good. But then for it to be murder it must be unlawful, and if it truly is for the greater good (killing a rampaging gunman in a school) then maybe it isn’t murder but just killing?

    It’s a blury line, and that’s before we’ve even got started on war…. ;)

    (By the way I’ve not yet watched the video above)

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