Kind of, but a death note is worse. It's a far more detached way of doing something as significant as killing, which makes it more likely to be abused. And if people are willing to engage in so much bloodshed in ways that require getting your hands and your heart dirty, imagine how willing many would be to use the notebook. — Πετροκότσυφας
To me, someone who's willing to have absolute power over another or to grant absolute power to another is disconnected from reality and thus, by definition, neither responsible nor enlightened. — Πετροκότσυφας
I think that a slippery slope argument is possible. You imagine having an incredible power in your back pocket, but just using it completely justly and legitimately that one time, and then never again? It wouldn't be the case that using it would be easier each time, requiring less legitimacy, until you'd be exercising it because you can, it's easy, and you have nothing better to do. — All sight
Did the lives of Iraqis improve when they killed Saddam Hussein?One could think it is permissible to kill a malevolent dictator to save and improve the lives of the people he oppresses — TheHedoMinimalist
my conception of being responsible, so whoever engages in it, is by definition irresponsible. — Πετροκότσυφας
I thought it wasn't about you but about what it means to be responsible. If you could argue against his persuasive definition of responsible, then you'd probably open up the discussion again. He actually invites you to do that in the next sentence. — Benkei
It reads a bit like your intention is a fail safe system to administer death penalties. You are skipping whether the death penalty is moral in itself and if so for what sort of crimes. Human justice, however, is fallible and any penalty system will invariable punish innocents. For that reason alone we should never impose the death penalty because it is irreversible and cannot in some sense be renumerated financially.
Additionally, you cannot take life when a life has been lost; that's revenge, not justice. — Benkei
Did the lives of Iraqis improve when they killed Saddam Hussein? — andrewk
I enjoyed the 2017 Death Note film, by the way. That's the only version I've seen. — Terrapin Station
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