SlitheryDee
Lifer
- Feb 2, 2005
- 17,252
- 19
- 81
justice and deterrence among others
Deterrence falls under punishment as behavior correction.
Punishment for justice alone makes no sense.
When you say that punishment is for "justice" you are still saying exactly the same thing as I am.
The idea of a "just punishment" is an attempt to limit punishment to what is necessary for behavioral adjustment
no, deterrence is much broader than just the individual being punished
absolutely it does
yeah, i don't think so
false, it is based on what is deserved
no, deterrence is much broader than just the individual being punished
Why try to come to a conclusion about what is deserved though? Why does a greater crime deserve a greater punishment? Part of the reason that many people think behavior correction and "justice" exist separately from each other is that the level of punishment we consider appropriate for a particular crime can be arrived at semi-instinctually. You "want" to punish someone more harshly for greater crimes. It "feels" right to do so. So few people go through the process of asking themselves why it feels right. What function does this instinctual urge serve? It is quite clear that it is to allow society to self correct without even having to think about what they are doing. It is to change or eliminate anti-social elements.false, it is based on what is deserved
I don't see why that makes a difference. Deterrence is punishment that corrects the behavior of people who aren't necessarily being punished. Same concept.
You "want" to punish someone more harshly for greater crimes. . . . What function does this instinctual urge serve?
It is quite clear that it is to allow society to self correct without even having to think about what they are doing.
What if unicorns were hidden inside whale suits masquerading as narwals?
Deterrence is behavior PREVENTION not correction
if the only 'punishment' for a crime is going to the doc to get a slight attitude adjustment, is that really a deterrence?
What we're disagreeing on here is exactly what we're trying to accomplish by punishment. I say it has a concrete purpose, and a definite goal to achieve. Once achieved, punishment beyond that is immoral, wasteful, and unnecessary. You are countering by saying that punishment is for "justice",
and that justice apparently has no purpose.
It just "is". THAT is what I am unsatisfied with.
I'm sorry that you don't care for justice.
I'm sorry that you have an animalistic/instinctual notion of justice.
Imprisoning someone should be a way to remove a problematic person from society. If that person is no longer problematic, there isn't any reason to imprison them anymore.
no . . .
I give up. What is the purpose of justice as it pertains to criminal punishment then?
NO MAN sitting in a cell for 20 years can possibly be normal when done.....sorry.
Nelson Mandela was in prison for more than 20 years. He has a nobel prize now.
Work release, unpaid, and life at a halfway house with strict curfews, etc, with the type of work you are assigned being related to the type and severity of your crime. Punishment for you while being more productive to society than the time you would spend in prison.Let's say there were a man who murdered someone (or maybe raped someone). Let's say he spent about 20 years in jail. Also, let's assume we had something like a cerebroscope using which we could we could read his brain. On reading his brain, it was found that the man truly regretted his actions and he had genuinely changed, i.e. he had been "rehabilitated".
Considering this, would you still want to keep him in jail for what he did 20 years ago or would you give him a chance at life in the outside world?
Let's say there were a man who murdered someone (or maybe raped someone). Let's say he spent about 20 years in jail. Also, let's assume we had something like a cerebroscope using which we could we could read his brain. On reading his brain, it was found that the man truly regretted his actions and he had genuinely changed, i.e. he had been "rehabilitated".
Considering this, would you still want to keep him in jail for what he did 20 years ago or would you give him a chance at life in the outside world?
