Of course we have a reward system in place to but punishment is more effective in imparting moral lessons. — TheMadFool
It is? That's news to me. In my psych classes we learned the opposite:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/family-affair/200809/rewards-are-better-punishment-here-s-why
Punishment is just easier to consistently dole out/we're more inclined to react to bad behavior. — NKBJ
Not really. I was just surprised to find out that there is, despite creativity being our forte, only one method, punishment, that we employ to guide people onto the right moral path.
Of course we have a reward system in place to but punishment is more effective in imparting moral lessons. Think of it. Quite odd isn't it that there's no reward for good behavior in terms of a legal sense. Yes, you get recognition, admiration, even fame, like Mother Teresa or Bill Gates, but we're under no legal obligation to praise, admire or the like such people.
If it was that people were moved more by reward than punishment it would have been the law that we should do good and praise, admire, respect the good. — TheMadFool
Well... the data says you're wrong. But I guess you'd rather argue by your intuition?
I think that's a pointless exercise though. Honest intellectualism/philosophy should be willing to change positions when confronted with evidence that doesn't support it. — NKBJ
Adults are punished by children are not. I guess children are motivated more by reward and adults more by punishment. — TheMadFool
It bears mentioning that this actually hints at failure of moral education because it literally means that we failed to educate our children in morality and so must control them through punishment when they're adults.
Something's wrong. What do you think is a better method of educating children and adults in morals? — TheMadFool
Children are fundamentally different from adults — Metaphysician Undercover
Children are morally pristine, innocent, — TheMadFool
Children are morally pristine, innocent, but criminals are morally depraved and some are downright evil. — TheMadFool
Its observed that it creates anxiety and fear of authority more than any balanced morality later in life. The more effective way is to show and really teach children why their behavior is wrong. — Christoffer
That's where the difficulty lies. Morality has a rational basis on empathy but children are incapable of understanding arguments aren't they? That or their reasoning skills aren't developed enough to comprehend moral arguments. It's like trying to feed an infant with adult food. Infants simply lack the ability to digest adult food.
So, we must resort to a simpler method - reward & punishment. It's a language children understand. — TheMadFool
As for the difficulty with adults, I think a punishment is justified as a deterrent and not as a process to exact vengeance. When people know they'll have to pay a price for breaking the law, they will think twice before doing anything illegal. If they still commit a crime then punishment is justified because they were aware of the consequences and yet committed a crime. — TheMadFool
I guess it's assumed that by adulthood we're supposed to be in the know about moral rules. Is this assumption justified? — TheMadFool
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