Atonement, as in making amends for the bad things you've done in life isn't a religious term. Religion coopted many terms and declared monopoly on them (like morals and marriage), but the concept itself isn't intrinsically part of it. An atoning criminal is someone who has acknowledged the bad deeds he's done in both quality and scope and feels the desire to make up for them in a reasonable fashion. There's a reason I called this an ideal situation, I don't believe it's always possible to make it happen.WATCH-MAN wrote:The first problem I have with that view is, that most people do not really know, what exactly atonement is.
The second problem I have with that view is, that atonement is a religious term.
The third problem I have with that view is, that you can't force someone to atone. A forced act can not lead to a reconilation with god respective with the society.
Actually no. There was a recent study done on warcrimes committed by various parties in WW2 and they found out that warcrimes were more likely to happen in groups where superiors were either actively supporting them or...doing nothing about it if the crews committed them on their own. I think there's likewise a need for society to put certain actions and behaviours in the bad category, to at least keep the laziest of criminals from freely indulging in their trade.The first problem I have with that view is, that it ascribes punishment a deterrent role. The problem I have with deterrent theories is that the culprit is not punished for what he did but for what others may do.
@Stas Bush
I'm somewhat confused by your opinions. To clarify, do you think that the death penalty is unnecessary for nations that are affluent enough to keep their worst imprisoned for life?
Are you pointing towards the 0% recidivism rate of executed prisoners?Him being dead is a benefit.
There's a saying that you recognize societies in how well they treat their weakest. Well, besides infants imprisoned criminals who have largely lost control over their lives are among the weakest. I myself consider the loss of an autonomous life to be already harsh enough, even for rapists and murderers and I certainly disagree with "tough on crime" attitudes which IMHO opinion service nothing but to create an easily identifiable "other" to focus a societies frustration on.Lagmonster wrote:I think the only real incentive to improve how your society treats its worst citizens comes from the attitudes your population have towards them. I think what you're saying here is true - it does seem to be the 'easy way out' - but that describes other attitudes that I'd argue we don't change for reasons other than pure sloth. If a society has a problem with the inhumane, I'd assume that the messages "we're being treated very badly by society" should have the same weight on the public conscience as "we're being killed because society doesn't want to treat us well". Except in one case you have, as mercenary as this sounds, less suffering people.
Hellhole prison are symptomatic for deeper institutional problems in a society.The real noggin-scratcher to my argument isn't (to me) whether suffering or death is morally worse - it's determining just how badly society has to arse up its corrections system to arrive at a point where a prison sentence is the equivalent of a lingering death sentence.
Sedation is controlled poisoning. Certainly not comparable to more standard imprisonment. As has been pointed out already, US prisons are among the worst in the first world and so shouldn't be taken as the standard of incarceration.energiewende wrote:Since people are not immortal, what is the clear distinction between the death penalty and lesser penalties, such as imprisonment? For instance, is there a substnative difference between keeping someone under sedation until they die of natural causes, and executing them while sedated? If not, how about if kept sedated 23.99 hours per day? How about 23 hours per day? How about not sedated at all, but simply locked in an empty box with nothing to do for 23 hours per day (which is what solitary confinement is in the US)?
So is in your opinion a two month sentence for light theft the same as life imprisonment and the death penalty? I think that's a ludicrous position to take.I can well understand an argument against punitive justice as a whole, but not against the death penalty specifically.