Tautology said:
Pseudonym said:
You clearly aren't a numerically identical person, so murder.
Tautology said:
Murder is a human killing another human without a legally justifiable reason. It's a question of whether or not the kill was lawful.
I don't really think it matters. We can assume for the sake of argument that the killing was unlawful and/or immoral. Or we can disregard the law and just get to the point that is relevant to the thought experiment.
OP was too vague so I took the legality into consideration for the sake of the argument.
If I killed an alternate version of myself somewhere that a legitimate legal authority declared such an act unlawful and I had no valid reason for doing it, I have committed murder.
Is that satisfactory?
Fair enough. I have a bit of a rant beneath this about my annoyances at discussing thought experiments and it might come across as more hostile than I want it to. Sorry if it does.
Thing is, most thought experiments have holes to be poked into them of you look closely enough. The question is, whether those holes are important to the issue at hand.
I'll explain why this thing is sort of grating to me. Having studied philosophy I have been in multiple classes discussing thought experiments and very often there is that one person who manages to derail the entire conversation by thinking of a 'clever answer' that has little to do with the issue at hand, possibly five times in a row. Ussually it is just sheer inability to see the point but that can still be awfully annoying.
An example a friend once told me was the following, the context being whether it is ever ok to lie 'an attempting murderer chases his victim and the victim runs into your house to hide. The murderer knocks on your door and asks you whether his victim is in your house. Should you lie to him.' One person replied 'why don't you just shoot the murderer?'
Anyone who gets the point of the thought experiment, and has some feeling for how they work, can instantly rephrase the experiment such that you don't have your gun at hand, the murderer is actually three guys that you have no chance of beating in a fight, etc. In that way we could cover all of these annoying clever answers. The point is though, that if we have to do that, the conversation takes 30 minutes longer than it needs to and we waste our time discussing trivial objections. (I have similar thougts about people not getting the point of a comparison and just pointing out arbitrary differences between the two things being compared or just blankedly and indignantly stating 'you can't compare X to Y')
Yes, you took the legality into consideration but I don't see how that was for the sake of the argument. It might be for the sake of having some argument, but what seems to me like a distracting one. The OP was admittedly not exactly a beacon of clarity but the relevant distinction was clearly 'murder or suicide' and not 'murder or lawful killing'.
So the point I want to make, at the risk of repeating myself, is that to save time and effort it is important to distinguish the point of a thought experiment from it's more accidental features.