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@ADreamOfLiberty
"all else equal"
It's a thought experiment and not that big a stretch. Let's say you would have bought the car if the other person hadn't.
"all else equal"
"all else equal"It's a thought experiment and not that big a stretch. Let's say you would have bought the car if the other person hadn't.
Who loses the advantage if the (supposed) innocent party and all their property
Who loses the advantage if the (supposed) innocent party and all their propertyOkay, then they're renting the car.
Similarly to Palestinians in hospitals using the hospital but not owning it.
It's really not that different, if that person never existed, you would have access to the car/be able to bomb the hospital without killing civilians.
GOT YOU!If you mean to steal a rented car then the victim is the rental company
your guy needed a car to catch the enemy
GOT YOU!If you mean to steal a rented car then the victim is the rental companyYou also shot them though to get the car.
Then it's your car that you own and rented to them.
"the good effect must be sufficiently desirable to compensate for the allowing of the bad effect"
"Who loses the advantage if the (supposed) innocent party could not have their rights violated in any way because an omniscient omnipotent super-intelligence which is absolutely and eternally tasked with the sole goal of enforcing this rule by whatever means are most elegant and cunning prevents said violation of rights."Double infinity + 1, I win.
if everyone else in the world lined up in front of your attacker to prevent your counterattack, they all forfeited their lives.
The opponent still loses their advantage, because you would somehow be able to get the car without harming the person.
Shooting the person is a needed to access the car
just like collateral damage is inevitable with bombing the enemy location
In either case it would be convenient for you if the other person didn't exist and had never rented your car or been near the terrorist base.
it's far too slight to actually impact what the definition of self-defense is.
But not so much the non combatants...
Babies are always a good emotional argument.
As for this field non-sense, the general formulation is you have a right to do anything you want so long as it doesn't violate the liberty of others (other moral actors, the civilized). Since getting murdered is a violating of liberty, throwing a javelin at an empty field is morally distinct from throwing a javelin at a field containing an innocent person.
I think you're applying a different standard to this javelin case than you were before.
I am asserting a right to not be in a battlefield where collateral damage is a major risk.
I am asserting a right to not be in a battlefield where collateral damage is a major risk.Why does the guy lose his right to be in the battlefield because the person next to him throws a javelin?
You're violating that person's liberty by killing them because he wouldn't be dead without you taking action.
Right to self-defense is basically "you have the right to do anything unless it harms anyone unless that person is an aggressor."
Adding an innocent person to that field has the same effect in each case of causing an NAP violation if you throw the javelin.
That's more general than self-defense, it's the right to liberty.
He wouldn't be dead if the aggressor didn't violate rights.
chain of last necessary cause
You're not saying "X is similar to Y in this way so it must be similar in all ways" right?
Aggressors already violated rights and thus any 'rights' they may have are practical mechanisms to avoid injustice and rapidly end ongoing threats to the rights of anyone.
But i like to say : Stronge do what they can and weak suffer what they must
That's more general than self-defense, it's the right to liberty.Self-defense is derived from from the right to liberty.
The aggressor directly violated your rights but didn't directly violate his.
Rights violation implies harm of some kind.
The guy wasn't harmed until you retaliated.
Your choice to retaliate affects whether the third party lives or dies and directly harms them.
If the aggressor turned and shot the person next to them, that would be violating their rights even further.
So there is still room to violate that person's right by throwing a javelin, which is what you are doing.
chain of last necessary causeRetaliation isn't necessary, though, it's a choice.
You're not saying "X is similar to Y in this way so it must be similar in all ways" right?Again, self-defense is part of the right to liberty, so the same rules apply.
Hence, empty field is basically the same as a field with an aggressor, from perspective of right to liberty. Again, you don't have an obligation to defend yourself, it's just allowed like anything else unless it harms a third party.
Babies are always a good emotional argument.It's a practical argument. The babies Israel bombs are not willing assistants or members of Hamas.