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That's too quick and easy. C*unts like this need to suffer.He knew his deed was wrong and therefore he should pay the price, IMO hang him high.
That's too quick and easy. C*unts like this need to suffer.
Just about everyone can be controlled with "carrots" far better than they can be with whips. The same even goes for animals or "lesser apes" than humans. Beating a dog when he pees inside will work far slower (or not at all) than giving him a treat when he does it on the lawn.
It's simple social constructionist pragmatism I propose not humanism. The problem with theories of humanity that don't account for social construction is that they then imply that the individual is just "evil" and the process he became that way was random. That's a pointless and unsophisticated way to approach any problem and can never work. Imagine if Kepler or Galileo etc had said "Well some of this lights in the sky thingies just move funny and that's just the way it is." We wouldn't have advanced very far in the fields of astronomy and cosmology.
And of course how can we ethically justify killing someone if we admit that his deeds were just a result of random "evil" that lurks around an occasionally infects someone ? How is he to blame for "contracting evil" when it's clearly something nobody wants to have curse them as according to you it makes you worthy of being killed ?
Intellectually it is. But that's perhaps not as important to people than vengeance and blood lust and the resulting catharsis, so I understand if they feel that way, even if acting out violently from our reptile brain is a regression towards barbarism.
In that sense it does. But where do we draw the line at what is a heinous deed ? Not everything is as universally repugnant and obviously heinous as this event. Also who gets to decide when such a deed is carried out ? How is it fairly enforced ? How do we ensure innocent people aren't executed ? It's a very slippery slope we start to slide down.
By the time someone has committed the atrocity it's far too late for carrots. Peeing in the house is not heinous - when a dog maims / kills someone (eg that kid on the beach a couple of months back) then it is put down - why, because it is recognised that the risk of re-occurence is higher than the potential for rehabilitation (habituation, etc).
Depends on the research you read - there is a strong argument that social constructionism alone cannot explain deviant / socially murderous behavior - there seems to be some genetic / biochemical component as well.
How do you ethically justify dying of Ebola? Nature doesn't have ethics - something happens or it doesn't - so you get Ebola- you die - them's the breaks. So you contract 'evil' - you kill someone - you die - them's the breaks - I'll cry at the Ebola victim's funeral - I won't cry at the other
Ah, here we approach some common ground - where do we draw the line indeed? That is what we have the law for to help us decide where that line is. Enforcement is separate from the principle that it needs to take place. My argument for the Death Penalty presupposes that as many checks and balances are in place to prevent the innocent from being executed.
What is the ebola victim spreads unwittingly it and it kills other people. No difference if we don't add ethics into the equation. Both acted unwittingly. You either cry at both funerals or none of them. You want to go full post modern them's the breaks.
And I never said I was against the death penalty. I just said if it's not shown to prevent murders then it's nothing more than old testiment vengeance devoid of context or ethical merit. It's just blood lust. I'm saying if you are going to kill someone there has to be a better reason than "it lessens my anger" such as "it's a deterrent against crime" for it to have any ethical or pragmatic justification.
Agreed. No social constructionist would disagree. It's also too late for whips.
The dog metaphor was to demonstrate that even with organisms far simpler than human beings carrots work better than whips in shaping desired behavior.
Yes there's a biological element. People with more testosterone etc have a higher capacity to be aggressive. People with smaller frontal lobes has lesser potential to have highly developed senses of ethics etc. Some of these we are born with, some of them are caused by environmental factors such as poor diet and intellectually stimulation/stunted development as a child. But it's widely accepted that you can take any individual under a certain age and put him in either a stressful unhealthy environment and the chances of him acting anti socially is boosted dramatically and vice verse if you put them into a nurturing and healthy social environment.
Had the experience of your youth been similar to this individual it's extremely unlikely you would have the values and personality you have today. Had this person experiences been different it's highly unlikely he would have acted in this way.
We'll have to agree to disagree here - if an Ebola victim spreads the disease unwittingly and it kills other people that's one thing. If an Ebola victim knows he has the virus and consciously spreads it to other people then s/he is simply a murderer. Let me put it this way, if someone murders someone else, they give society the right and permission to be murdered (death penalty) in return. If I walk into your house and piss on your lounge carpet then I automatically give you the right to walk into mine and piss on my lounge carpet. The difference between humans and animals is the ability to reflect on your actions before you before them - if you get infected by the 'evil' virus and suddenly want to start murdering people left and right, a human being is able to foresee the consequences through rational forethought - if s/he cannot, then they're no better than an animal, and like a rabid dog, should be put down immediately since they are no longer part of the human race and therefore are no longer entitled to the rights an privileges of a human being.
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Again, have to agree to disagree - for me the death penalty is not there to satisfy bloodlust - it is there to provide an ultimate consequence in reaction to a deed than you cannot make reparations for - once you've murdered someone they are gone - forever - you can't fix that. You intentionally trample upon someones right to life, you give up your own right to life
I agree 100% - the point you're missing is that by the time a human murders another human you are way beyond the point of shaping behavior - at this point therefore given that you cannot shape the behavior any longer you have to move towards how best to (1) protect society from further predation by that particular individual, and (2) provide an example to others of the consequences of such anti-societal behavior
I agree 100% - the point you're missing is that by the time a human murders another human you are way beyond the point of shaping behavior - at this point therefore given that you cannot shape the behavior any longer you have to move towards how best to (1) protect society from further predation by that particular individual, and (2) provide an example to others of the consequences of such anti-societal behavior
You see I don't believe in an "evil virus" that randomly just forms in our minds. That's no better than believing in being possessed by the devil, tokolosh etc and other outdated mumbo jumbo. But in actual fact it's a very good analogy for what people are effectively saying when they take no interest in the cause of someones behavior. It may as well be anything they just don't care and want the person punished.
It tells us nothing about the world and about what causes people to act in such insanely cruel ways to just put it down to "They are evil!" or "People should know the difference between right and wrong." Well clearly people don't know because they do these types of things happen all over the world every day. If there's a terrible threat around is it not wise to try and understand the cause of this threat so we can do something about it ? What's the wisdom in saying "We will wait until after the threat has happened! Then after it's happened we can perhaps react to it ! no point in trying to understand it or stop it."
What you are then saying is that these things are inevitable and destined to happened and a part of life we must accept. Where as I am saying "People can be averted from acting out in violent ways if we can understand and change the source and catalyst of their behavior." To sum up you think human beings are destined to be a certain way and we must create a society to inhibit their freedom as much as possible. I think they are blank canvases and we must both push and pull on their wants and fears to get the best out of them and that in doing this intelligently a free society is possible and desirable.
They are very fundamentally different views. I find yours terribly hopeless pessimistic and cynical. You probably find mine naive, optimistic and unrealistic. You probably would describe me as a liberal and I might describe you as a fascist. But that's neither here nor there and I doubt either of us fits that description. We may agree to disagree.
In a perfect world we would also sign that contract and it wouldn't even be necessary to enforce it. If I for one were responsible for taking someones life without really good reason I would take my own out of guilt. But it's not a perfect world. It's far from one yet. But still I think the best way to stop crime from happening can only be obtaining if we fire all our artillery in a preemptive strike at the causes of crime and violence, rather than pretend there's nothing we can do to locate it until it's fired at us first. That's the crux of my views.
LOL - must confess it's the first time in my life anyone's called me a fascist - liberal plenty of times but never fascist.
Anyway, good debate. I do confess to being somewhat cynical and maybe even pessimistic in this particular area of debate - maybe it's my personal experience with having lost family members to murderous criminal activities over the years (two cousins and an uncle - 3 separate occasions spanning the last 25 years gunned down in cold blood).
Thanks for the interesting chat - I haven't had one of these kinds of discussions for a long time (not too often you end up discussing ethics and moral certitude in the IT world - more likely to have a roaring debate about IOS vs Android vs Windows )
The rape problem won't be solved in SA until we start investigating the role pheromones plays in all of this.
Dude, you're a loon.
The rape problem won't be solved in SA until we start investigating the role pheromones plays in all of this.
What's special about the pheromones in this country ? Enlighten us.
Men who produce more, coupled with other factors, are more likely to be sexually agressive.
Men who produce more, coupled with other factors, are more likely to be sexually agressive.