nPeace
Veteran Member
I could see how that would cause a problem.That was the plot of the movie Minority Report. Three people had the ability to predict murders. They would inform a special police unit who would try to prevent the crime before it happened. Murders were reduced to close to zero, as the murderers were stopped before the crime was committed. They were then imprisoned, which was the moral dilemma raised. Was it right to punish someone for something he hadn't actually done?
Imagine your dad, the most loving person anyone could want, being dragged off to prison, for something he never did.
Agreed. A can of worms that won't go away.That's just something raised by the movie, and you reminded me of it.
The answer to your question is obvious. Yes, we should stop crime before it happens if we can. In fact we already do. And we have the crime of "conspiracy" to charge them with, if appropriate. But if the way we stop them is wholesale killing of all potential criminals it opens a whole other can of worms.
I think the reference was to the firstborn children in Egypt, but I think the children in Noah's day fit here as well.I think the reference is to the flood. I don't see how your response holds up with babies, who are incapable of most actions, let alone understanding morality in any form.
I was not saying that God knew what they would become, and slaughtered them for this reason. the Bible does not say that.
My point was, what made them innocent. Who determined that they were innocent.
So, my question was at what point did they become, not innocent.
No one was innocent, in Egypt, nor in Noah's day.
No one actually was not guilty of the death penalty.
It was only the mercy on God's part that allowed Noah to live.
Mercy, in allowing the human race to exist... despite their condition.