By technical definition, yes, just as a theft is still a theft even if the stolen objects are retrieved and returned to their owner. The more interesting question, I believe, is whether, or how, human social mores react to a reality where murder is usually impermanent. Time Lords, for example, make a legal distinction between a killing that provokes a regeneration and a killing that causes final death.
But social mores are usually influenced by the society's notions of morality. The words even have the same linguistic root.
There are quite a few different distinctions. One example is legal punishments. Final death--usually in the form of vaporization or dispersal--is reserved for high treason, genocide, or other very serious crimes. Forced regeneration, however, is the penalty for a number of lesser crimes including illegally breaking the non-intervention policy.
Yes, it's still murder. The person still dies. Their heart stops, their brain stops working, all their functions cease. Just because it doesn't last doesn't mean it's not death.
The will to kill. A person can die because of an accident or an illness. They can die of something completely mundane like a heart attack here. But because you want to watch someone's life leaving their eyes? Something else entirely.
Technically, since the people return, it's not the talking of life. Their souls remain; they don't stay dead. By your definition of life, killing someone here won't take their life.
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[LOL NOT A SORE SUBJECT AT ALL. :|]
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Life seems almost demeaned, in this place.
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The name of the code is the same as that of a famous movie.
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What is the distinction?
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There are quite a few different distinctions. One example is legal punishments. Final death--usually in the form of vaporization or dispersal--is reserved for high treason, genocide, or other very serious crimes. Forced regeneration, however, is the penalty for a number of lesser crimes including illegally breaking the non-intervention policy.
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Any other examples?
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[Pause. She's rambling. Now feeling kind of embarrassed.] Uh. Pretty much. Life is living.
..Did I mention I'm really bad with the whole definition thing?
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Technically, since the people return, it's not the talking of life. Their souls remain; they don't stay dead. By your definition of life, killing someone here won't take their life.
Why is it still murder?
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