A famous Australian case involved one Mrs. Cogdon, who killed her sleeping daughter by bringing an axe down on her head. For this reason the court dismissed the charges, saying that Mrs Cogdon could not be guilty of murder because she had not killed voluntarily. But what should we make of a case in which a person arranges in advance to do something involuntarily?
A famous Australian case involved one Mrs. Cogdon, who killed her sleeping daughter by bringing an axe down on her head. For this reason the court dismissed the charges, saying that Mrs Cogdon could not be guilty of murder because she had not killed voluntarily. But what should we make of a case in which a person arranges in advance to do something involuntarily?
A famous Australian case involved one Mrs. Cogdon, who killed her sleeping daughter by bringing an axe down on her head. For this reason the court dismissed the charges, saying that Mrs Cogdon could not be guilty of murder because she had not killed voluntarily. But what should we make of a case in which a person arranges in advance to do something involuntarily?