@Utoptia
I think it's still a life. And I really don't think I'm the person who can decide on his punishment.
Also, I think me letting him die and him receiving a punishment such as imprisonment, life imprisonment and full-time hard labor, or execution, etc, are totally different. Punishing murderers by law can show a correct path for them to follow in order for them to redeem themselves, and it also can show other people to not follow their old paths. Me letting him die would be just me myself dealing with the situation. Like Galich said, letting someone die can be a very traumatic experience, especially when you know that you can save them, I believe.
@Anon99
No idea. He might be a serial killer, willful murder, or very-kindhearted murderer. :D
I agree with this, "A man walks into a room with a loaded rifle and kills everyone there. If he does this in America he's a murderer, if he does it in Afghanistan he's an American hero. Murder might be in the eye of the observer."
@Alvis
In high school, it was Maths. I really really liked Probability. In uni, ... um .......... none. :D
I love the idea of teaching college students. Maybe that would suit my ideals more than research if I do go the grad school route...
I'm planning on walking that route too. I know it's gonna be quite tiring and annoying. I asked some lecturers who're my seniors, all of them told me that they had had fun teaching students, but just for a few years. They told me now they loved breaks perhaps more than students did. :D Still, I want to be there. I don't know, but I think changing your decision midway through your goal is a bad influence for yourself. I try to never change my decision unless I'm pretty sure that my another decision is really the best one.
@Blackkitty
Yeah, it's hard, and whatever your answer is, you may somehow sound bad as well. :D
last edited at Aug 29, 2016 3:05AM