That is defensible only if one is certain that the baseline level of possible robotic error in civilian protection exceeds that baseline level of human error... I, for one, would not bet against the possibility that for some military applications, we will some day come to see
mere human judgment as guaranteeing an unacceptable level of indiscriminate and disproportionate violence.
Not exact matches
If God is as the Calvinist insists, then they are right: we
mere humans can not question God's
judgment or challenge His choices from eternity past to choose some for redemption and others for reprobation.
3 So when you, a
mere human being, pass
judgment on them and yet do the same things, do you think you will escape God's
judgment?
For we shall then be all too likely to dismiss death as a
mere incident, to think of
judgment without due seriousness, and to regard heaven and hell (our possible
human destiny, for good or for ill) as nothing more than «fairy - tale» talk.
Not sin, for it is thought of as a universal
human attribute; nor forgiveness, for it is conceived as a
mere event in the world of external objects, on which man by his very theories and proofs exercises
judgment, asserting that divine forgiveness can and must be thus and so.
In the process, students will become autonomous
human beings, not the
mere creatures of their culture, and will develop capacities of critical
judgment that will enable them to participate in creating - «constructing» - a better world.