lovett
Deity
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2007
- Messages
- 2,570
But if B didn't deny C a means of hydration, did he really kill him? Salt water is not a means of hydration. Arguably no poisoned water is.
Well, let's think about about the death C died.
Death caused by lack of water happens via a number of mechanisms. Primarily, we're interested in the fact that water left C's body for a prolonged period, and no water entered C's body. Sweating is the most likely way this happened. C, being in the desert, sweated a certain amount of water and did not intake any water to replace this. This, quite naturally, lead to the amount of water in his body to steadily fall. Eventually, C had so little water left in his body that his vital systems could no longer function. They began to shut down one by one, and he died. This death is individuated by this entire process.
Well, what about the death C would have died if his canteen hadn't been sabotaged, and he had drunk the dehydrating poison within? Well, this death would have involved different mechanisms to that of simple lack of water. Imagine this poison works a little like salt. Salt water dehydrates people because it is hypertonic. It has greater osmotic pressure than do cells, which causes water to flow out of cells. This is not something that happened in C's actual death, but it would happen in this hypothetical death. This poison would cause water to leave C's cells. The amount of water in his body would not actually change, note. But it would no longer be available to his vital systems. Eventually, C would have so little water available to his vital systems that those systems could no longer function. They would begin to shut down one by one, and he would die. Is this death the same death as that described in the first paragraph?
Well, I don't seen any reason that we must say it is. There are patent differences between this death and the previous one. C died the first death, he didn't die this death. He died a death characterized by lack of water, not by dehydrating poison.
So, how does B fit in? Quite straightforwardly. B caused C's actual death. Oh, it's true enough that C would have died whatever B did, and died of dehydration. But this hypothetical dehydrated death would not involve the exact same mechanisms as C's actual death. And as such, we can distinguish between the two deaths. One was the death C actually endured. B caused this death in that, if he had not acted as he did, C would have died a different death. And if you cause someone's actual death, you cause their death. So B caused C's death (and perhaps we can distinguish between causing someone's death and causing someone to die here).