Quite. I phrased that wrongly.Darth Wong wrote:I agree with certain parts of your argument, but this makes no sense whatsoever. Morality itself is a social engineering construct. To say that we should strive to solve social problems through social engineering rather than moral condemnation is to ignore this fact.ArcturusMengsk wrote:The great effort that society has continually failed to make is to learn to administer punishment - which will always fail, but will nevertheless be the standard by which society deals with deviancy - dispassionately and without moral condemnation.
'Moral condemantion' is a justification of feeling of revenge, nothing more and nothing less. The penal apparatus, however much it should like to think of itself as a dispassionate administer of some pseudo-scientific method of personal repentance and 'salvation', is itself nothing more than a codified device by means of which individual feelings of revenge are taken up and made good upon by the state. I feel (and this is entirely a personal position) that this is rather self-evident, and that it ought to acknowledge what it is and not seek to justify itself upon any but emotional grounds. It is not a 'deterrent' to crime and never has been - it is in fact a liberal slogan that prison creates criminality, though I'd argue it's the act of exclusion itself, in any form, following from Foucault - and does more harm than good in trying to project itself either on scientific (i.e. the panopticon) or 'moral' grounds. Society has constructed an 'economy of the spirit' by which to mete out punishments according to their severity which has no root in the natural order, but which likes to believe that it does.