Jeff250 wrote:Foil wrote:I don't know if you're intentionally pushing my buttons, or just skimming and making assumptions, but I'm tired of it. I'm really upset, is that what you wanted?
It's not just you. But one of the great things about the DBB is that its members aren't the type to be compelled by such personal attacks. I always find reassurance in that.
Guys.
This conversation began in earnest after members posited a series of attacks and patronizing lectures to Bettina, for her assertion that she wished Couey executed because she wanted revenge. The implication I perceived, finally actually expressed by Dravis, is that her view is an immoral view.
Foil, for one, has explained that I misinterpreted his remarks, and I accept that. I was taken aback by that last post from -- I wasn't trying to imply anything about Foil's character. I knew he would answer "no". I think Foil overreacted, but I accept some responsibility for that.
I found (and I find) Dravis' view offensive. It's one thing to disagree ... quite another to challenge someone's ethics. When Dravis finally compared Bettina to Couey (color it any way you like, gentleman, that is what was said) I made my view known that I found that disgusting. I still find it so, and I make no apology for it.
I have posted several rationale why retribution is a valid basis for capital punishment. I acknowledge that reasonable people can disagree. What I'm getting back are questions like "why is revenge an excellent thing?", which to me is a rhetorical dance to avoid confronting people who would compare Bettina, a 17-year old with a true heart, to a child rapist and murderer.
When we begin to permit such comparisons, it's like calling opponents of affirmative action, racists. It diminishes the meaning of the word "racist". Bettina needs no lecturing about whether vengeance is an acceptable rationale for capital punishment -- the highest court in the land has ALREADY accepted it. That certainly doesn't mean anyone HERE needs to (I disagree with the Supreme Court routinely). But it does certainly shift the burden a bit, doesn't it? So I put it back to you:
Why is vengeance an
immoral rationale for capital punishment?
On personal attacks. You will search long and hard, but you will not find a post by me (or by Bettina, I'll wager) that says people who do not support capital punishment are either immoral or act unethically. There's lots of stuff going the other way. Which is one of the reasons I got involved.
Now Jeff, you'd like to know why, in a vacuum, vengeance is intrinsically good. That is an unanswerable question, in my opinion. Trees are not intrinsically good. Dogs are not intrinsically good. Sex is not intrinsically good. Even my own mother is not intrinsically good (and many of you, I'm confident, believe that if my mother had never had sexual relations and conceived me THAT of itself would be intrinsically good). Nothing is intrinsically good, except quality, and that is probably God, if you have one. And no one can define that. No one.
Regarding our life on earth. Context defines the morality of the act in question - that's my opinion. I'm not sure if this is what Foil means when he refers to situational morality, but I think it might be.
Jeff wrote:Dogs are risk averse. It would still seem silly, even for people who think that revenge is good, for somebody to seek revenge on a dog for biting them.
Actually, I can give you a pretty good argument going the other way (by the way, did you just call me silly?). (1) Vengeance animates action against the dog. (2) Terminating the existence of a competitive species (we're winning now, but believe me, dogs will one day rule) perpetuates the human species, because it takes wild dogs out of the gene pool. (3) Domestic dogs that do not bite me, enhance my chance to live and procreate; (4) My gene pool continues, much to the dismay of Foil.
Sort of like, Eugenics Lite. Anyone wish to compare me to Hitler? Hope not....
Jeff wrote:Even those who hold revenge as a moral virtue . . .
Virtue? How about, moral rationale? I like that much better than "moral virtue". No one will ever believe me if I run around saying "Revenge is a moral virtue", and I'll never bring Foil from the dark side.
Foil. Just kidding. Please do not seek vengeance against me.
Jeff wrote: . . . seek revenge on people for what they choose to do, not what they are. It's not clear why risk aversion should change this.
Can we judge people by anything other than their actions? I really don't think that's our place ... we just don't have that kind of ... God-likeness.
Jeff wrote:I'm not a psychologist, but a condition like sociopathy at the very least warrants further investigation to see to what extent its biological rather than moral.
Neither am I. And naturally I'm opposed to any scientific research that might undercut my own position.
Jeff. I agree. In the meantime, though, I go with what I believe to be true.
Jeff wrote:The last thing we should be doing though is appealing to intuitions and going with "what's obvious" or what we feel like doing.
I completely agree, BUT. I tried to say this before, and I was admonished by Lothar - a man with whom I disagree on this (and ... other things) and whom I deeply respect (mostly because he was able to trick Drakona into marrying him) - we can't view things in isolation. Life is far more complex; I am only arguing that it morally justified to hold that retribution is one of several, inextricably intertwined bases for capital punishment. It is not unethical to so hold, and I won't be moved from that position.
Jeff wrote:Bold Deceiver wrote:You have employed a double-negative. What you're trying to say (I think) is that BD is eager to conclude that Bet is no better than Couey.
This is actually a common misconception. Some people think that if a sentence has two "negative" words in it that it must be a double negative. But if a sentence is a double negative, then we should be able to remove both negatives without changing the meaning of the sentence. Let's test this.
Before: "We can't conclude from this that Bet is no better than Couey..."
After: "We can conclude from this that Bet is better than Couey..."
And yet clearly the meaning has changed. Just because we can't conclude that Bet is not something doesn't mean that we can conclude that Bet is something. The latter is a stronger claim.
Well, I struggled with this one ... and you have completely lost me. I'm 65 percent sure it is a double-negative but I've been wrong before. How's that?
Jeff wrote:Bold Deceiver wrote:Need we ask anyone tell us these things?
I'm not sure that your . . . question is grammatical.
Another theory is that you left out the "to" in front of "tell," intending it as an infinitive, so that it should be read like this: "Need we ask anyone to tell us these things?" Maybe you could cast some light on this, but the sentence as you wrote it doesn't parse for the native English speakers around here.
[/quote]
I do not disagree (another double-negative!) -- but it's a quote. Sorry to be so cryptic - it's from Robert Pirsig's "ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTENANCE".
Bold Deceiver wrote:Your other questions were ambiguous, and unanswerable as phrased. I thought it might be useful to flesh them out elsewhere. This question is an excellent one, notwithstanding your unfortunate remark refusing to engage in a dialogue on the subject. So you get the response from me that you deserve.
Foil wrote:That's weak. I've asked you to explain why revenge is good....
That's the problem. (Did you just call me weak?) I thought (and I think) the question was weak, because it (a) operates from a premise I have never asserted (i.e., revenge, in a vacuum, is intrinsically good); and (b) it departs from the subject manner (or at least I thought we were talking about revenge in the context of retributive justice). Struck me as a tactic, but I maybe I was wrong.
I'll continue to defend myself gents. I'll try to do so in a manner that does not offend; but I think that's a two-way street. If indeed the knives are out, well, it's getting just about right for me.
BD