Who are they? And where did they say it?Rustovitch wrote:Actually they did!Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death.
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Who are they? And where did they say it?Rustovitch wrote:Actually they did!Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death.
Well, I'll let them handle that.Rustovitch wrote:Actually they did!Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death.
A negligible risk and an economic drain perhaps, which is acceptable when one considers the moral drain involved in killing people, innocent or guilty.Rustovitch wrote:I think the main point is that killing someone, in all cases, is morally wrong, even if there is an uneven balance on the scale of justice. Rustovich can claim he has contradicted that all he wants (he hasn't);
I have, the problem is you have actually changed some of the details of the argument, maybe without realising.
To me its not about revenge or retribution, permanent imprisonment still means they pose a risk and they still cause a drain on society.moral revenge is not a valid reason to kill someone when that person is locked up and is no harm to anyone else. I don't want to see them released, but I don't think they should be killed.
Put simply: killing of humans is wrong in all cases not directly involved with direct defense of self or loved ones. If the criminal is of no threat, he or she should not be killed. The horrors of a particular crime may make this judgment seem unfair, but we are debasing ourselves by succumbing to the urge for low retribution.
I feel that there are ways around those facets of criminality. I have less problem with complete isolation of criminals (cruel or unusual?) than I do with killing them. They got themselves into prison, but it is still morally reprehensible to kill them.PLAYER57832 wrote:I agree, except that some people commit crimes so heneous they are a risk even within prison or, who's crimes are so heneous even the chance that they might be released or escape is just to great a chance for society.Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death. I think the main point is that killing someone, in all cases, is morally wrong, even if there is an uneven balance on the scale of justice. Rustovich can claim he has contradicted that all he wants (he hasn't); moral revenge is not a valid reason to kill someone when that person is locked up and is no harm to anyone else. I don't want to see them released, but I don't think they should be killed.
Put simply: killing of humans is wrong in all cases not directly involved with direct defense of self or loved ones. If the criminal is of no threat, he or she should not be killed. The horrors of a particular crime may make this judgment seem unfair, but we are debasing ourselves by succumbing to the urge for low retribution.
Then you have a whole other group (gang leaders, etc.) who are able to orchastrate or commit crimes while in prison.
Those are the sorts of people I think might need capitol punishment.
Revenge has nothing to do with my view. I don't feel revenge is a proper justification. Just protection.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
If you are going to pass judgement on my posts shouldn't you at least learn what the argument is about?Snorri1234 wrote:Who are they? And where did they say it?Rustovitch wrote:Actually they did!Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death.
If you are going to assert something shouldn't you show evidence for it?Rustovitch wrote:If you are going to pass judgement on my posts shouldn't you at least learn what the argument is about?Snorri1234 wrote:Who are they? And where did they say it?Rustovitch wrote:Actually they did!Neoteny wrote:I don't think anyone is claiming the rape, torture, and murder of a baby is morally equivalent to putting said murderer to death.
<sigh>khazalid wrote:if anyone can tell me why exactly the life of a - and i use the term in its truest definition - parasitic infant should be punishable by death then i'll buy them a premium and sit on three carrots on webcam for them.
The difference between the Cow, foetus and infant, and their variance for treatments under the law is the subjects potential for consciousness not sentience but consciousness.khazalid wrote:just one quick question then..
you can kill and eat a cow because it is less sentient than you are - lower in the food chain. i might not agree with it but most people certainly do.
you can abort a foetus up to around 30 weeks because it is presumably (about) as sentient as a cow.
a baby (0-18 months lets say, for the sake of argument) is no more aware or valuable than a foetus or a cow. say im a mother and its my baby, what exactly are the grounds you're looking to execute me on? infanticide, abortion, hamburger - whats the difference? is it because the little sprog is cuter? is it the vulnerability in the baby blue eyes? there might have been a case for it back in the mists of time before there were several billion children too many, but not now. if anyone can tell me why exactly the life of a - and i use the term in its truest definition - parasitic infant should be punishable by death then i'll buy them a premium and sit on three carrots on webcam for them.

i think the relative degrees of comprehension are a little irrelevant to a discussion based on the right to life/imposition of death. an animal, specifically a barnyard one, is certainly aware of its impending doom. i know firsthand that pigs look pretty terrified just before the stun gun. symphony or not, it actually has a greater capacity for fear and pain than a newborn - in this context i think your argument looks more like a value judgement than a logical progression.A cow acts as though it does not comprehend it's own existence in the universe and as such we must assume that it doesn't. Thus the cow becomes Hamburgers and no one really minds that much.
if it wouldnt last long without the help of others, as you delicately put it (ie - it is still in a parasitic stage of development) then i fail to see what the practical difference is, not to say the philosophical one, which you clearly have some grounding in.once the child has come to term it's life and it's potential for consciousness, it's potential to write symphonies, raise a family, die sad and alone etc are it's own, the treble clef is on the Manuscript, society may help it on it's way, feed it, educate it, blah blah, but at this stage the life belongs to the child.
not strictly true - its the old 'deterrent effect' thang rearing its ugly head. whether you prescribe to that particular theory or not doesnt matter, it is explicitly stated as a utilitarian positive in the statutes of every country that uses it.This is because capitol punishment in any form is a direct admittance that we can do nothing about a problem other than deal with it's results. i.e that we corporately admit that people are innately evil and that we as a society can do nothing about it other than kill it.
killing is never "humane"PLAYER57832 wrote:No, the comparison is between killing one person adjucated to be guilty in a relatively humane way and killing multiple innocent lives in a heneous manner.
Seriously- how many mistakes can one person make in a single title line of five words?khazalid wrote:theres a youtube link in it, you probably missed it in the sea of gibberish
Well your increased efforts certainly pay dividends.Symmetry wrote:When I'm in grammar Nazi mode I do my best not to make mitsakes.
Ah man- you got me. Busted. Hoisted by my own petard. How ironic! It's hubris, simple hubris. How could I have dared to think that I could escape such eagle-eyes?Rustovitch wrote:Well your increased efforts certainly pay dividends.Symmetry wrote:When I'm in grammar Nazi mode I do my best not to make mitsakes.
Okay fair enough, you can say that an animal has the acumen to fear it's own death, but it's not the same thing as saying it can comprehend oblivion. Every living thing wants to...em.. live... pigs surely don't like slaughter houses, but pigs will never comprehend anything outside the confines of their existence. The infant, although it cannot do this in it's early stages, certainly does have the capacity for this consciousness, as proved by the fact that in later life it will consider the value of things outside of it's own basic needs.khazalid wrote:excellent post, but i'd like to take you to task on a few key areas.
i think the relative degrees of comprehension are a little irrelevant to a discussion based on the right to life/imposition of death. an animal, specifically a barnyard one, is certainly aware of its impending doom. i know firsthand that pigs look pretty terrified just before the stun gun. symphony or not, it actually has a greater capacity for fear and pain than a newborn - in this context i think your argument looks more like a value judgement than a logical progression.A cow acts as though it does not comprehend it's own existence in the universe and as such we must assume that it doesn't. Thus the cow becomes Hamburgers and no one really minds that much.
The practical difference is that "parasitic" refers to to a fixed biological union between host and interloper. Anyone can feed a born child where as only one person can feed the foetus. Does this mean that the born child belongs to anyone who could potentially feed it, nah of course not, it's its own, the rest of society does right by it because this is what a humane society does.if it wouldnt last long without the help of others, as you delicately put it (ie - it is still in a parasitic stage of development) then i fail to see what the practical difference is, not to say the philosophical one, which you clearly have some grounding in.once the child has come to term it's life and it's potential for consciousness, it's potential to write symphonies, raise a family, die sad and alone etc are it's own, the treble clef is on the Manuscript, society may help it on it's way, feed it, educate it, blah blah, but at this stage the life belongs to the child.
Agreed... Mill and Bentham have allot to answer for, we need a new thread for why utilitarianism sucks i thinkone last point, somewhat unrelated.not strictly true - its the old 'deterrent effect' thang rearing its ugly head. whether you prescribe to that particular theory or not doesnt matter, it is explicitly stated as a utilitarian positive in the statutes of every country that uses it.This is because capitol punishment in any form is a direct admittance that we can do nothing about a problem other than deal with it's results. i.e that we corporately admit that people are innately evil and that we as a society can do nothing about it other than kill it.
I've read an article here or there, I often throw Kantian spiel around but its only really a smoke screen, the minutiae of recent work on him is mostly lost on me!and re: kantian reference, i'd like to recommend some of peter singer's work to you, following the philosophical lines of the categorical imperative et al.
Thanks, nice response to my response!once again, very nice response!

Actually, mitsakes are a Japanese cocktail of unusual strength which Symmetry is quite right not to make whilst being a grammar nazi - he might get it wrong under the affluence of incahol..Rustovitch wrote:Well your increased efforts certainly pay dividends.Symmetry wrote:When I'm in grammar Nazi mode I do my best not to make mitsakes.