What metric or criterion do you use to detect evil? — Average
I personally think that words like evil can be used by people to refer to whatever they happen to dislike for whatever reasons they find convenient at the moment. — Average
I think it's something like 'the will to cause gratuitous suffering in others', usually born out of resentment or hatred, which is usually born of out of a refusal to recognize and correct the defects in one's own culture or self. I don't know. Thoughts? — Theorem
Would you consider it evil if those “others” were serial killers? — Average
At what point does suffering become gratuitous? I’m assuming you mean uncalled for; lacking good reason; unwarranted and not given or done free of charge. — Average
Should we torture them mercilessly before doing so? — Theorem
I’m on board with torturing them mercilessly. Not because I’m some kind of sadist but because I think it would help deter others from engaging in similar behavior as well as being a form of justice — Average
That said, I have major qualms with granting the State the power to torture. I worry about false accusations, false convictions and abuses of power. — Theorem
The state doesn’t need permission to do anything. Historically It does whatever it wants. — Average
As far as false accusations, false convictions and abuses of power go you could make the same argument against execution or any form of punishment. — Average
What do you mean exactly by “in the other direction”? — Average
Widely held cultural taboos (such as those against the use of torture) can make it less likely (though certainly not impossible) for the state to engage in such actions. — Theorem
especially when you consider that the frequency of accidental wrongful convictions in the US has been estimated at 2 - 10%. — Theorem
Is the merciless torture of even one innocent person by the state worth a % reduction in violent crime? — Theorem
I hear the argument a lot that capitalism is an extension of human nature, or best reflects human nature -- and this betrays a rather cynical view of human beings, I think. I don't agree with it. I think this too is itself a result of capitalism. — Xtrix
It seems to me that a key problem for change is the view that the bad guys have already won and the situation is hopeless. That worldview seems to me to be one of capitalism's greatest protective factors. — Tom Storm
I would argue that this only constrains what the state does in front of everyone but not what it does in secret. — Average
I don’t have as much faith as you do in statistics. I believe that things like courts and prisons are actually weapons in the hands of a ruling class. Meaning that they are used not for the sake of “justice” but instead to defend their supremacy — Average
Of course this isn’t what I’m advocating. But let’s discuss the question in hypothetical terms. If it could be proven that no one would be wrongfully convicted would you have a problem with the policy I’m proposing? If so how would you argue against it? — Average
Since I live in the US I'd probably start by arguing on legal grounds. "Cruel and unusual" punishment is (theoretically) prohibited by the Constitution. — Theorem
On consequentialist grounds, I might query the value of torture as a deterrent over an above to the death penalty and the 'barbarizing' effect that the legitimization of torture has on the wider culture and on international relations. — Theorem
But cupcakes are little different to philosophical outlooks, which are direct expressions of human thought, feeling and action. — Theorem
Do you mean the basic human dignity of the serial killer? — Average
If you know anything about the 13th amendment then you know that slavery is acceptable under the constitution as a form of punishment. — Average
I wish you would clearly state your precise meaning when you use words like barbarizing because historically concepts like civilization and barbarism have been used to justify atrocities. — Average
The practice I’m condemning is the destruction of innocent life and not the punishment of the guilty. — Average
And also the shaper of human thought, feeling, and action. Christianity is an expression of thought, feeling, and action as well -- and vice versa. — Xtrix
Systems of beliefs and values shape how we interpret the world and ourselves; these are worldviews, paradigms, perspectives. To argue that nihilism or capitalism is simply an expression of "human nature" either isn't claiming much (since many things may be considered an expression of human nature), or is claiming too much (namely, that it is inevitable, since human beings are primarily motivated by x, where x can be selfishness, greed, personal gain, etc.) The former is a truism, the latter is unjustified (in my view). — Xtrix
I don’t think so. — Average
The US is already savagely cruel and exceedingly brutal in my book and has been for a long time. One look at the CIA and it’s track record should be enough to prove that. — Average
I think I would base it on who is the predator and who is the prey. Otherwise I would be forced to conclude that serial killers are innocent and their victims are guilty. — Average
Biology says otherwise. — Theorem
The predator can become the prey. — Theorem
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