Lexicus
Deity
We're not "killing people to show people that killing is wrong", it's "we're killing people who kill to deter killing". If the killing deterred killing, then it's killing to prevent killing.
Why do we want to deter killing?
We're not "killing people to show people that killing is wrong", it's "we're killing people who kill to deter killing". If the killing deterred killing, then it's killing to prevent killing.
Why do we want to deter killing?
First of all, the second sentence does not make any sense, because I'm not sure what "your individuality as defined by existence" is supposed to mean.
But even putting that aside... you say animal rights come from "society" but human rights come from "existence"... Why? What is it about humans especially that they get to have their rights come from "existence" rather than "society" as with the other animals? Why don't animal rights come from "existence" too?
This is just factually incorrect. It is pretty standard practice to euthanize a dog or lion or any zoo or domestic animal that attacks and maims and/or kills a human.
That's just another way of saying that "morality and rights" come from "society".
It was more like a critique of the whole idea that human life is somehow special or sacred, which is exactly the argument you are making here when you say the human rights to life and self-defense come from "existence", but animal rights don't. And his conclusion... that this/your position is all just made up self-serving BS by humans, is what I am suggesting in response.
No. This does not follow for numerous reasons. First of all, you've dubbed the right to life and self defense as "natural" rights which exist superior to any laws and come from "existence" rather than the laws/rules/consensus of "society". So if they exist independent of law/society how can they be stripped by society? The only way a right could be legally/morally destroyed by society is if it was created by society in the first place.
Also, the "right to self defense" comes from the specific fact that you are protecting your own life from imminent danger doesn't it? So once you're dead, your life is no longer in danger, so there isn't any more "right to self defense" for you or anyone else to to invoke or your behalf. Suggesting that the right to defend oneself from imminent harm can somehow survive the lack of any danger of imminent harm , and even the death of the possessor of the right is a complete non-sequitur... doubly so is the suggestion that this danger of imminent harm can somehow "transfer" to someone else months later.
Finally, if the "moral authority to kill the would-be murderer in self defense" can "transfer" into a right to kill the murderer "in the form of after-the-fact punishment", then why can't the victim's neighbor, or relative, or any citizen-at-large just go mete out the "after-the-fact punishment" by killing the murderer themselves? We're talking about a "natural" right here, which according to you, supersedes any societal rules or laws. If the victim had a "natural" right which has now been "transferred", doesn't it remain a "natural" right? So why would anyone have to wait for "society" to exercise it? See it just makes no sense to talk about rights existing above or outside of societal creation.
OK, but what if it was "universal"? What if we were living in some kind of environment, like a post apocalyptic world, for example, where food sources were so limited, that cannibalism was common, widespread practice? Would it then become a "natural" right? If yes, then that wouldn't that seem to suggest that "natural" rights are actually quite flexible and circumstance-dependent, rather than hard-and-fast principles that have higher moral authority than law. On the other hand, if not, then "universality" can't be the basis of something being a natural right can it?
Also, just note that we've gone as far down this path to actually start suggesting that there might be a natural right for people to kill-and-eat each other.![]()
Honestly, I cannot even figure out why you asked this question. Maybe you're going for a point, but it's not at all clear.
Honestly, I cannot even figure out why you asked this question. Maybe you're going for a point, but it's not at all clear.
It's morally consistent to kill people who kill people because killing people is wrong? Whatever you're smoking to make that look morally consistent. I want some
A real-life application of this would be the case of a police officer who shoots a suspect approaching him with a knife. The alternative of simply backing away from the suspect existed; therefore the police officer was not actually defending herself, she was defending her right to not back down - to "stand her ground" if you will.
No. It isn't consistent. Self defense hinges on the imminence of the threat. Otherwise, if the right survives the imminence, then you'd have a right to go hunt down and kill the guy who "threatened" you with a gun a week prior, out of "self defense".
Aye there's the rub isn't it? Because if my right to a gun the state giveth... then the state can taketh away... but if my right comes from god then no one except god can take it away... even better... if my right comes from "cause I say so" then no one can question it.
The problem with "cause I say so" though... is that there is no limit to what rights I can declare are inalienable. "I have the "natural" right to set a huge bonfire in the middle of the street cause fires occur universally in nature all the time so my very existence gives me the right to set fires"![]()
As I said, the objection to the death penalty is that it doesn't actually create a self-defence outcome. Not that the foundation is immoral.
I guess for the same reason you don't see any contradiction in "killing to deter killing."
The cop was given the job of defending the innocent, they cant just stand their ground, they have to subdue the criminal.
That murderer wont be killing anyone else. I cringe when I hear a jailed murderer has murdered guards or inmates. Just send him off to meet his maker.
That murderer wont be killing anyone else. I cringe when I hear a jailed murderer has murdered guards or inmates. Just send him off to meet his maker.
Killing someone for something they might do is not a fundament of Justice.
Yet with your deterrence idea, you're talking about killing people not even for what they've done or what they might do, but because of what others might do![]()
You're missing the point. Everything that you're describing... ie theories behind the criminal justice system, including strengths, weaknesses, motivations etc... its all about law/society, not "natural" rights. There is no "natural" right to own a gun. Nothing you've said about the criminal justice system contradicts that.So, 'deterrence' is an effect based on a matrix: it's a function of the perceived probability of being caught, the benefit of committing the crime, and the predicted penalty (plus others I'm missing). Each of those variables can be changed to influence the odds of deterrence being effective. But 'deterrence' is a fair portion of our underlying reason for having a Criminal Justice system. It's not perfect. It needs to be better. But we're okay with deterrence being a goal - we're just arguing about the efficacy of the various inputs.
This is why we're willing to jail a kidnapper. It's not just rehabilitation, by no means. (full disclosure: I don't view 'punishment in service of Justice' as morally worthy ... so, I usually just don't understand that viewpoint). We're jailing kidnappers in order to protect ourselves from kidnapping. A deterred kidnapper is the goal, in the end. We're not trying to jail all kidnappers. We're trying to get no kidnappings.
If the death penalty had some type of real deterrence effect, then I don't think it would be immoral to have one. You'd be killing someone in order to prevent other deaths. It's all a probabilistic argument, but it's also law-of-large-numbers. It would require a certain set of conditions of deterrence for a death penalty to prevent more murders than it causes (the death penalty being a 'caused death'), but that's about it.
We're not "killing people to show people that killing is wrong", it's "we're killing people who kill to deter killing". If the killing deterred killing, then it's killing to prevent killing.
My cells "exist". Cancer cells and viruses "exist. A rock "exists". The sun "exists". Are they all "individuals" with a "valid moral claim - to live their life"? A chicken "exists". Has its "existence" made it an "individual", with a "valid moral claim - to live its life"? Existence itself establishes no moral claims whatsoever. This whole claim you're making... that "existence" bestows inherent rights is a poor argument, and I reject it. In fact, you said:Existence has made you an individual, you are you and no one else. Thats why you have the right - the valid moral claim - to live your life.
So you've already acknowledged that "rights" don't come from "existence", they come from other people, thereby contradicting yourself. Your arguments are not even internally consistent, which is part of why they don't stand up.If you were the only person in the world rights would become irrelevant.
You're missing the point. Everything that you're describing... ie theories behind the criminal justice system, including strengths, weaknesses, motivations etc... its all about law/society, not "natural" rights. There is no "natural" right to own a gun. Nothing you've said about the criminal justice system contradicts that.
Full stop. We agree. The "right" to own a gun comes from the state and can be taken away by the state. There's nothing "natural" about it.So? I'm not defending the right to own a gun. For me, it is so obviously a 'privilege'
Let me explain how it works with lobsters...
Let me explain how it works with lobsters...