Exactly, in the former situation mens rea isn't an issue. ( I don't know why american law insists on using latin terms when my language is latin based and it doesn't)crayzz wrote:I'm pretty sure Alex got it right above.
The example given was a split second decision; it was a primal reaction. There's a huge difference between reacting in fear while about to fly off a cliff and planning the murder of another. One is held accountable for the latter, not the former.
MysticWav, your quote is still remissive to the term antisocial though, and of course, a law that is consistent to the system it's integrated in certainly cannot be criminal ( it can be illegal though). The problem with your reasoning is that the first two pursuits don't have your life depending on their fullfillment. In regards to the third, and the example of organ failure, one of the conditions I affirmed to be necessary ( though I would understand why one wouldn't catch it the first time, as it wasn't a point I insisted on) was that the necessity was immediate. Therefore, the situation of death by organ failure doesn't seem to match - if you will die in a moment if your organ isn't replaced by a healthy one, you certainly wouldn't have time to perform the transplant anyway. If the problem threatening your life won't end it with a pretty severe degree of immediacy, then it isn't justified. To help illustrate with a less extreme example, while hoping to help resolve Alex's question, if you see someone getting robbed, it's okay to incapacitate the offender( to not go to murder, let's say you're perfectly able to do a sleeper hold on the person without their being able to escape or hit you, and assume the assailant is buck naked so they won't have a hidden weapon, and just have mirror shattering ugliness from the front that compells the victims to give them their money). If you see the same person and think that sometime in the future they're going to rob someone with their Herman looks, but don't actually see them rob anyone, then it's not okay to incapacitate them ( you should call the cops on them for indecent exposure though).
And of course, because immediacy is an issue, so is specificity. In the case, you couldn't have not hit Person B and hit Person C instead, as that denotes choice ( after all, if you can choose targets you can probably also choose to not hit anyone at all). In the situation, your hand was "forced". And of course, the case will be investigated even if you're not accused, so if it turns out that Person A could have done a totally different think that it would be reasonable for them to think about at the time and they didn't do it, guess what, it's jail time for Person A. In the organ failure case, unless this is a zone of Hypothesitania ( what I like to call the land where all these hypothesis occur) where stabbing someone gives you all their healthy organs and you have the ability to gauge the exact second of your death, and you do it just a few seconds before that time, it wouldn't be justified.
Plus, there are tons of legal exceptions to the hole fist and nose saying - the right to go into a house that was throwing a party whose stereo was so loud it was both impeding your sleep and breaking legal regulations for loud noises at night, and cutting the wire the stereo was hooked to; the right to go over your neighbours lawn because it's the only way that doesn't require unreasonable effort to get to a public road; and yeah, the right to swing your fist at someone else's nose if it's done in self-defense. Now you might say these are all reactions to unlawful actions, but the truth is the legal rabbit hole goes pretty deep on all these situations ( look up putative crimes for an interesting read, but actual cases and not just the definition.)
BTW, my country is Portugal, and no problems brah, you don't come off as insulting at all.