Darth Wong wrote:
No I don't. I just don't care. Pragmatically, any legal system which gives too much weight to your mindset only opens up the door for any sufficiently dishonest prick and his lawyer to get him off any crime. This is not a hypothetical; we've seen it done.
Again, I've no problem with execution when cases get that severe. If society lets a person get so far gone that they actually represent a threat to other people, at best, the reasons should be an afterthought - they need to be removed.
If they are found to be legally insane, they can instead spend their time on death row being psychoexamined.
Wrong, fucktard. You claimed that if someone has sufficient mental problems, their brain is necessarily "broken", and a person with a "broken" mind should not be blamed for his own actions. Why does that argument not apply to sociopaths? The fact that you didn't phrase your argument that way does not mean it does not lead that way.
I don't see anything wrong with that, personally. That you get your panties in a bind over it is, frankly, not my issue. If a sociopath is sufficiently manipulative that they are a danger to those around them, they should be removed.
The issue I have with blaming -them- in such instances is that these sorts of cases are, in theory, preventable. Send the sociopath-turned-psychopath or psychotic nut to death row, go back through his childhood and try to find out what the warning signs were, learn to find and address them in society, preventing future cases.
If they know that what they are doing is illegal and carries consequences, then that's too damned bad, isn't it? The only time insanity should be viable as a criminal defense is when the delusional person actually thinks he was not doing something illegal. For example, if someone is so insane that he thinks he's killing a squirrel when he in fact is killing a person. However, it's quite a stretch for you to mutilate my argument from "assholes should not be able to use childhood bullying as an excuse for their behaviour" to "there is no such thing as severe psychosis", Mr. Strawman.
I've honestly no idea how you are taking that to be my argument. Once it gets to the point where they pose a serious risk of killing someone they need to be removed from society. I am not suggesting you let your kids get friendly with someone who genuinely believes little people are demonic and need to be exterminated.
They're a perfectly valid response to your logic that anyone whose mind is "broken" should not be blamed for his actions, you lying little shit.
Well, point out exactly where I lied and how and I will apologize for my error. Otherwise I am just going to assume you are trying to get a rise out of me.
That's rich, from a dishonest little fuckwad who took my original argument about "assholes" being held responsible for their own actions and declared that I was denying the existence of all mental disorders.
Where did I say you denied them?
You said you did not care:
I don't give a shit whether the person is "able" to take responsibility for his own actions.
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Irrelevant to my position. I don't care whether they can fix themselves.
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Irrelevant to my position. I don't care whether asshole behaviour comes naturally to him.
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Irrelevant to my position. I don't care whether they want to fix themselves.
And thus, I inferred that you did not, in the general case, since, if a person is running around with loose nuts, they should be fixed or removed. If they cannot do this themselves, it is up to society to do so whether society wants to or not, or pay the price for not doing so.
Oh right, because there is no such thing as deterrent?
I thought I explained how it can be counterproductive for psychosis in my post?
A person who is hallucinating, has delusions, sees patterns that are not there in reality or is incapable of actual rational thought is not necessarily going to think of your action as a deterrent. I referenced a fairly specific example of a sort of person that I am sure we have both experienced - people who genuinely believe God is talking to them. Everything we say and do gets put through that filter. Your idea of deterrence is their martyr complex.
Anyway, I missed Kuroneko's post:
kuroneko wrote:I'm not sure why you'd make such an analogy. If the experience with the software is odious enough, the typical response would be to hate both the software and its makers, but in your analogy, the person "is" the software.
As a programmer I tend not to have this reaction. When an odious situation occurs, it's usually one of a few select situations:
1) My own damned fault
2) Hardware issue
3) A situation in which I can trace down the development team and sometimes even the individual responsible, and personally explain to them what went wrong and hopefully how to fix it.
4) Doing something that has absolutely no business being supported. I suppose I could swear up a storm about all the goofy screwups in my adventures with virtualization, but some technologies need a decade or two to mature and I need to make a value judgment about which ones I want to be a part of.
So I don't generally blame the software anymore. Except maybe ed.
It would be begging the question to presuppose that there is just one place where the fault lies...
I was trying to propose a simplified case, but anyway...
If the flaw is at least partly the result of prior choices of the neural network itself, then sure. A person is not just a neural network running through a predetermined set of training data. How much constraint there is on one's choices and future circumstances is varies quite a bit on one's situation, sure, but to deny that a person has no part in his or her own upbringing is just silly.
To be more direct, in the event of most mental disorders - Aspergers, sociopaths, psychosis - something is actually functionally wrong with the input. They lack the ability to perceive empathic cues (Aspergers), the ability to genuinely possess those reactions (sociopaths), or some factor of their world does not coincide with reality (psychosis).
Aspergers and sociopaths can learn. Psychosis can be corrected.
In an era where we can account for and address these issues when caught early enough - and early enough is always getting later - blaming them strikes me as nonproductive, however. You can, if you really want, but unless you address the issue your actions do not prevent new incidents from occurring, and prevention should really be the goal of any justice system.
And again, if someone needs to be removed from society, remove them. If something is incapable of holding responsibility for its actions and cannot be trusted, the proper response is to not let it take action.
Give fire to a man, and he will be warm for a day.
Set him on fire, and he will be warm for life.