However which is really the best form of punishment? Is punishment a good idea altogether? — Fruitless
What is your definition of punishment? — Fruitless
Why is punishment considered an effective method in controlling someone's actions? — Fruitless
Thousands of years have seen numerous punishments for the crimes of people (or things). Many techniques have been put into practise - prison, torture and public humuliation.
However which is really the best form of punishment? Is punishment a good idea altogether?
What is your definition of punishment?
Why is punishment considered an effective method in controlling someone's actions? — Fruitless
- @Possibilitycourage, kindness and understanding, and theoretically you won’t need to try and control someone’s actions.
Do you think raising a child through harsh practises or through kindly practices would make them more successful? — Fruitless
Unless punishment is distributed according to the principle “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth”, it’s completely arbitrary and offers no resemblance of what anyone might reasonably deserve. A god could perhaps perform the equation, but not a human being. — Congau
Thousands of years have seen numerous punishments for the crimes of people (or things). Many techniques have been put into practise - prison, torture and public humuliation.
However which is really the best form of punishment? Is punishment a good idea altogether?
What is your definition of punishment?
Why is punishment considered an effective method in controlling someone's actions? — Fruitless
Why should we carry out punishment? — Banno
Perhaps we can take punishment to be a stop-gap measure; an inconvenient truth we must live with until we comprehend the truth about morality if that is even possible. — TheMadFool
Have you read 84K by Claire North? — Possibility
I wonder if you have been either a victim or a perpetrator in relation to this victim compensation system. — Possibility
The point of North’s thought exercise was to illustrate that a victim compensation system, while it may have some success, like all other ‘crime and punishment’ morality systems in effect, is not the solution - it does not ‘work’ in isolation, and is just as prone to corruption as any other. — Possibility
You’ve demonstrated that the system ‘seems to work fine’ in tandem with both incarceration and forgiveness. Remove those options, and I dare say that the system won’t work so well. — Possibility
In some sense, they may somewhat favour the rich — alcontali
...and you call it "may somewhat favour the rich"? — Isaac
All of that works absolutely fine for me. — alcontali
I don't give a shit how it's working out for you, this is a philosophy forum, not a tour guide for sociopaths. — Isaac
The point was a moral one. — Isaac
We collectivise and use our collective might to force them to give up their wealth, or adhere to laws which treat people equally. — Isaac
So, in your opinion, Asians would be sociopaths? Is that "philosophy" in your opinion? It sound much more like racist bullshit. I like Asians. I like their culture and their ways. Your racist views on Asians are despicable. — alcontali
Your point does not make any reference to a complete moral system with real-world mileage. Hence, it is just the system-less bullshit that is otherwise so typical of the godless vermin. — alcontali
Furthermore, as far as I am concerned, all morality and all legitimacy emanate from the laws of the Almighty. — alcontali
That is probably why such wealthy people have moved all their factories to China, just next-door from here. — alcontali
stop lamenting that they should "bring back our jobs" because I do not see them doing that any time soon — alcontali
Anyone who shows such blatant disregard for the welfare of others as you show by your endorsement of a justice system which serves only the wealthy is a sociopath by definition. Asian, Greek, Jew, Christian, atheist... It's not the group identity, its the opinion. — Isaac
What measures 'complete', what smeasures 'real-world mileage', what measures 'system-less'? These seem like terms you arbitrarily apply to give post hoc justification for your dismissal of ideas which make you uncomfortable. — Isaac
It's you reading the book, it's you deciding which imam to trust, it's you deciding how to interpret laws in each unique case. — Isaac
You can't escape responsibility by hiding under the cowls of religion. You decided to adopt that religion. — Isaac
So we collectivise to put pressure on China too. — Isaac
I strive for what I think is right, not what I think is immanent. — Isaac
I never said that I endorse "a justice system which serves only the wealthy" — alcontali
about wealthy people benefiting (who cares?) — alcontali
Jewish law is a real system. Islamic law is a real system. Arbitrary remarks about "serving only the wealthy" is not a real system. — alcontali
For a starters, Jewish law is adjudicated by Rabbis. It is Islamic law where you have Ulema and Mufti. I respect serious systems of morality. I have asked jurisprudential questions to serious religious scholars in the past, and I have received verifiable and absolutely satisfactory answers. — alcontali
Atheism does not allow for that. — alcontali
without complete system to figure out the implications or wider ramifications of what you are saying. — alcontali
What measures 'real'? — Isaac
Even if you had your stupid machine someone would still have to program it and you'd still have to decide whether to trust this programmer or that one, each time they delivered an edict. — Isaac
Yes it does, the device in question is a brain. — Isaac
How do you know the other systems have worked out the complete implications of what they say? — Isaac
Therefore, it would be even possible to machine-mechanically verify these rulings. That is what I am really interested in: machine-mechanical verification of theorems/conclusions. It should be possible to achieve, and that is why I am really keen on it. — alcontali
Any system that relies on a text written in a natural language is going to require textual interpretation. Textual interpretation is never going to be machine-mechanically verifiable, because the text simply doesn't contain the necessary information. — Echarmion
assert Syllogism { all Socrates: univ, Man, Mortal: set univ | -- every man is mortal Man in Mortal -- Socrates is a man and (Socrates in Man) -- implies Socrates is mortal implies Socrates in Mortal } check Syllogism
When we get to legal matters, there is also the additional value judgement of applying a given law to a given set of circumstances, which is also not verifiable. — Echarmion
Well, there is another problem with the Islamic system-: What does it accomplish, exactly, besides making the victim's family -since this is mostly about murder- feel better, if the person pays the money? — HereToDisscuss
Them paying will not change their behaviour and won't deter them from doing such things in the future, and is only defendable if one commits to the assumption that punishment is carried out in order to get revenge, which in itself is suspect to heavy doubt and i would like you to justify why we should think of punishment in that way. — HereToDisscuss
Also, no, to convert it to formal language -which doesn't need to be done in pure code and i do not get the need to use Coq since classical logic would probably be fine, but that's another matter-, you need to figure out what the text meant by certain statements so that you can use them but that requires textual interpreation. — HereToDisscuss
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