N
noname223
Archangel
- Aug 18, 2020
- 6,019
I asked myself whether a 50/50 chance to get a punishment would make this question more realistic. An example would be you are part of an intelligence service, you are a spy in a foreign country and get the mission to kill the head of government of let's say North Korea. I could think of more war mongering, megalomaniacs.
But for this thought experiment we say there won't be any legal punishment. This question should be more about ethics. (and conscience)
First of all I think you coud get a pretty bad guilty conscience if you take money to kill someone. However, I think I could live with that if I thought the person is genuinely evil, kills and harms thousands of million of people. Maybe the leader of Hamas would be good another example. In practice I would very likely fuck it up and get tortured for it.
If there was no punishment I think I could to it for half a million. Is this a bold, edgy take or isn't it? I don't think I have the skills to become a spy agent though. And I think a thought experiment is something completely different to actually do it.
But for this thought experiment we say there won't be any legal punishment. This question should be more about ethics. (and conscience)
First of all I think you coud get a pretty bad guilty conscience if you take money to kill someone. However, I think I could live with that if I thought the person is genuinely evil, kills and harms thousands of million of people. Maybe the leader of Hamas would be good another example. In practice I would very likely fuck it up and get tortured for it.
If there was no punishment I think I could to it for half a million. Is this a bold, edgy take or isn't it? I don't think I have the skills to become a spy agent though. And I think a thought experiment is something completely different to actually do it.