The fact that they need to pay for their sins isn't to say they don't deserve any sort of existence or happiness - that, at least in most cases, is too extreme of a punishment considering the offence. — Agustino
Well of course they are meant to suffer if they do wrong - this stems precisely from the definition of justice. As I have defined justice, and as Plato and many other philosophers have defined it, it is giving to each what they deserve. If X deserves his monthly salary, then it should be given to him. If X doesn't deserve his monthly salary, it shouldn't be given to him.Oh but it does, for the duration of their suffering, for they are meant to suffer. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Suffering CAN be deserved, of course. So can rewards and goodness.No, it doesn't-- it stems from you definition of justice that suffering is deserved. — TheWillowOfDarkness
No you have just done a sleight of hand here. The person who deserves suffering is not "the world".It's just heaps more damage and loss on the world. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Ehmm so their friends etc. are "the world"? Look, saying that the person deserves to suffer isn't the same as saying that the world deserves to suffer. If he deserves to suffer of course it means putting more harm and suffering on him - that's precisely the point that we're discussing. So you're arguing in a circle - "the person who does wrong deserves to suffer" is wrong because "it just heaps more suffering on him" - of course! That's just the point. If my friend deserves to suffer, then I'll be glad to see him suffer, because justice is more important. Equally, if I deserve to suffer, then I should suffer - this is just what justice is - and I would desire to suffer if that is the case.Clearly false... the person who (supposedly) deserves suffering is part of the world. They have their own social connections, friends, family, etc.,etc. Others will be hurt by their suffering to. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So your argument is that because suffering doesn't give a gain to those who have lost, it is henceforth not necessary? I disagree - precisely because I take it as definition that justice is giving to each as they deserve. Do you disagree with that? If you don't, then do you agree that if someone does wrong, then they deserve to suffer for it? If you don't agree, then do you not see that it follows from the definition of justice - namely to each as they deserve - that the one who has done harm deserves precisely harm?The issue is that "deserving suffering" is not justice. My point here is that he does not deserve to suffer. The world doesn't need it and nothing is gained from it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I disagree - precisely because I take it as definition that justice is giving to each as they deserve. — Agustino
>:OThis definition, though correct in prinicple, is actually an empty generality. Who knows what another or even oneself deserves? Only God, if anyone. It is no good saying the law is just. because the law is made by men, and the law is an ass. Christ came to overturn the Law and substitute Love. Your sentiment of valorizing the enjoyment of suffering is fundamentally un-Christian. — John
Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. — I will let you find out who said this
The Law and the Prophets were proclaimed until John. Since that time, the gospel of the kingdom of God is being preached, and everyone is forcing his way into it. But it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than for a single stroke of a pen to drop out of the Law. Everyone who divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery, and he who marries a divorced woman commits adultery... — Luke 16:16-18
This is false. If I love myself, then I wish to be set straight when I go wrong. And therefore I wish to be punished - to get what I deserve - for having done wrong. And I wish the same for my neighbour - out of love.Enjoyment of the suffering of others is not consistent with either Law or Love, and hence it is un-Christian. — John
Sorry but for common folk, fulfilment is the exact opposite of overturning. Overturning means to replace - fulfilment means to uphold and extend. Those are very very different.Love consists in the fulfillment, the completion, of Law, which means overturning it — John
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