Symbolically yes, but literarily no.Well, isn't an eye for an eye ''deserved and proportional''? — TheMadFool
Modern law - and liberalism itself - are highly deluded about the nature of the world.I think I should disagree. Modern law considers an eye for an eye (or vengeance) as primitive. ?? — TheMadFool
Well, literally, "an eye for an eye" means if you pluck my eye out, I should pluck yours out. But obviously the deserved punishment for an action doesn't have to be proportionate in this literal sense. For example, what do you do if you have no eyes? (and hence it's impossible to pluck one of yours out?) How should you be punished then? Does it mean that in that case there is no proportionate punishment?Please clarify. — TheMadFool
I would say that the two are about the same but the words themselves are imbued with meaning in order to arouse different feelings. Was Edmund Dantes seeking vengeance or justice? It all depends upon one's point of view — Rich
The justice system exists because there were benefits for different individuals to comply to a shared system, and thus avoid the bad effects that vengeance had on their society. For example, medieval Italy was plagued by wars between vengeful families. It was bad for all of them. Hence the emergence of a shared justice system. So now punishment is not vengeance but correctional care, or a means to motivate members of a society to comply to its shared system.I don't get it — TheMadFool
:-}Having thought about it a little more I think justice differs from vengeance in that justice involves some degree of compassion and forgiveness on the part of the victim and the law which is not the case with vengeance. Perhaps the feeling is that one should not stoop as low as the offender. To add such an approach makes justice disproportionate to the crime, the victim suffering more than the offender. Be the bigger person, so to speak. I think we can interpret this at a social level but I shall not go into that here. — TheMadFool
You are interpreting an eye for an eye literally. If that's the case, and a man with no eyes, plucks one of my eyes out, how shall he be punished? Either he shall not be punished, as there is no proportionate punishment, and hence justice can't be done, or justice needs to be done and he needs to be punished. If he needs to be punished somehow, then OBVIOUSLY your assumption that the proportionate punishment is equivalent to the offence is wrong - because in this case his punishment will not be equivalent to his offence.However eye for an eye is evidently proportionate to an offense, thus according to you, it falls under justice. Yet, generally speaking, this philosophy of justice is considered immoral. — TheMadFool
I ask because, although I don't know much about the philosophy of law, it appears to me that the justice system seems to have evolved from a natural emotion/concept - vengeance. And it also seems to me that the law wants to, or at least tries to, distance itself from vengeance. — TheMadFool
I assume you are referring to punishment. When you commit a crime and are found guilty, you are sentenced a harm (fine, jail time, and, in some cases, death). It may be true that this system, from an evolutionary biological perspective, probably has its roots in our feelings of fairness and empathy being violated, thus producing feelings of anger and a desire to harm the transgressing individual. However, law also allows for societies to work and live together in a more uniform way, so there is a lot more to law and justice than those feelings. — Chany
However eye for an eye is evidently proportionate to an offense, thus according to you, it falls under justice. Yet, generally speaking, this philosophy of justice is considered immoral. — TheMadFool
Well, isn't an eye for an eye ''deserved and proportional''? Yet the law seems to disregard/condemn such a philosophy. — TheMadFool
We have to also factor in the community too. — TheMadFool
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