responsible person > good person
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then why unintentional instead of intentional?
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that's the kind of question you should really fire up the ol' inference engine for instead of having me fill in the blank but when you have an idea why that word would be there instead of the other one then you'll be reading it right
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what people seem to keep ultimately tripping up on is that "avoid unintentional harm" really means "just show due diligence in trying to avoid it, which includes making an effort to learn from (the inevitable) failures"
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I may even seriously raise the question of whether there even is such a thing as intentional harm, except in a few safely discountable extreme outlier cases. it's really not as obvious as it might feel
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that certainly seems entirely insupportible to me, so naturally i'm very curious as to how you would support it
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I just doubt doing what you know to be harm in the immediate scale without some underlying belief that it's for the good or at least justifiable on some wider scale is really that big a thing in normal psychology. everyone's got reasons.
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the thing i think is rotten to high heaven in there is that the idea that if you've justified the harm then it has ceased to be harm or ceased to be intentional
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fair. I'm probably over-nuancing the definition of "intentional" in my version
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