2. INTENTIONALITY IN INJURIOUS CRIMES
Injurious crimes (of all types, whether killing or something less) are of three types:
1. an honest mistake;
2. a mistake made in a deliberate injury;
3. or purely intentional.
An honest mistake is an act such as shooting an arrow at a wall and hitting a person (or shooting at a person and hitting someone else), or slipping from a height and falling on someone. The criterion for it is that the act is intended but not the person, or neither the act nor the person is intended.
A mistake made in a deliberate injury is when one intends an injury that is not generally fatal, such as hitting someone with a light stick in a nonvital spot (from which the person dies) and the like.
Purely intentional means to intend an injury of the type that is generally fatal, whether with a blunt instrument or a sharp one.
(Source: The reliance of the traveller” revised edition, Edited and Translated by Nuh Ha Mim Keller)
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