Opportunity for 'Fulfillment' of potential. There is a concept - surely intrinsic to most human beings regarding any situation characterised by a manifest imbalance of moral equilibrium, as exemplified by the likes of the Holocaust say - that a correction of such imbalance as retrospective as possible is innately requisite. While the motivation on the part of the victims of injustice towards achieving a current correction of their situation is of course a simply pragmatic and understandable one, the desire that such correction be imposed retrospectively nonetheless clearly involves more complex urges, characterisable at the most primitive level as an animal instinct for revenge and, at a level more empathetic, as a need to disinform, for reasons of self-respect, the contempt of erstwhile persecutors. Transcending such subjective victim-motives however, the witnessing of moral dis-equilibrium, even from the view point of disinterested observers, seems to promote a feeling of discontent and a sense of nihilism towards the prospect, impelling among most such witnesses the urge to seek an emphatic restoration of equilibrium.
Concerning this, the point I intended to suggest in my initial post in this thread was that, in regard to the concept of a court of absolute universal justice which perforce would require to include in its’ deliberations all factors on which the behaviour of the accused was contingent, a verdict imposing retribution, whilst perhaps equating with the concept of the retrospective restoration of moral equilibrium required, nonetheless would effectively constitute an abnegation of duty on the part of such a court regarding the required consideration of the demonstrable roll of Chance in permitting the opportunity to commit the transgression concerned, and result in turn then in the dichotomy whereby this over-arching factor effectively becomes the ultimate determinant of an individual’s fate - preserving some by default and damming others.
Perhaps the best accommodation regarding these conflicting contingencies which such a putative ideal court could in principle achieve then would be the delivering of a verdict describing the degree of guilt requisite to an individual concerning his culpability for those crimes that were in practice wilfully committed but yet not involving the imposition of an external punishment, appropriate as this would be only in the case of an absolute unqualified responsibility which accordingly in practise cannot exist.
Perhaps again however such a situation could still equate with the idea of a degree of retribution being required concommitant with the transgressions committed, in the sense that there would nonetheless exist an inescapable penalty for the culprit concerned in terms of an innately inevitable inaccessibility towards happiness being formed in proportion to the moral degeneracy incumbent on the degree of transgression committed, this in turn then perhaps promoting a process of remorse and, ultimately by this means, one of moral redemption? So, Retribution as it is required being sort of accomplished, but not in the apparently more satisfactory form of a morally referenced judgment based external punishment but instead - ultimately and ironically - in a form comprised merely of logicaly descended, and therefore in principle amoral, consequences? Maybe however a reconciliation on the part of the victims of injustice, who are after all those most deserving of the equanimity capable of being conferred by reconciliation, could nonetheless be attained, somehow, through resigning themselves towards such a paradox!
(All necessarily somewhat abstract and speculative, of course. Though, in my defence, I did put it as straight-forwardly as the subject matter could allow...I think! )