He has suffered terribly, after 15 years of wrongful imprisonment.
2 used to describe actions that are unfair or illegal: --
wrongful arrest/conviction/imprisonment His lawyer is negotiating compensation for his wrongful conviction.
Either way, the crux of an excuse is that one's blameworthiness for engaging in wrongful conduct-or the wrongfulness of the conduct-is reduced or eliminated.
And if per formance of the act would be morally wrongful, so too is the threat.
It is not necessarily easy to identify in law the intuition that one's dignity or integrity might be damaged by wrongful behaviour.
As has been evident throughout, the risk-liability theory requires only that the imposition of risks be wrongful.
First, there might be limitations on the threats it is legitimate to issue to deter wrongful conduct.
Surely not if you think even the initial proposal isn't wrongful.
For example, wrongs of these sorts raise problems of definition, since not ever y intentionally demeaning act is a wrongful insult.
Importantly, the arguments for mandator y, parent-funded insurance schemes still rely on the same fount of argument that supports wrongful life liability without pooled risk.