derpyderpins
In the Service of the Queen
- Sep 19, 2023
- 1,812
Interesting line of thought I can certainly understand. I always enjoy asking people what they think prison is for, essentially in three parts: punishment, rehabilitation, and protection of society from the dangerous criminals. I'm probably at 10%, 50%, 40%, or something like that, but I know a lot of people are largely about the punishment. I do think there should be some punishment as a deterrent, but I think in general we probably punish more than necessary, and the length of a sentence should only be super long if (1) rehabilitation is unlikely and (2) the chance of re-offending is high [thinking serial killers/serial rapists], but I don't think prison should be terrible just to punish them.I take morality very seriously, I believe that utilitarianism is in some form objectively true as maximizing pleasure and minimizing suffering are innate human desires present in everyone, however it's impossible to know objectively which actions are most moral in most situations as it would require an objective way of measuring suffering and being certain of the consequences of your actions which basically means predicting the future perfectly. many other moral values can be derived from utilitarianism.
An example of this taken to its extremes:
I think taking revenge is weak and stupid from a moral point of view, some people believe that the law should punish criminals and that a fair god would punish sinners but that's just ridiculous, taking revenge benefits no one, it only multiplies suffering, an eye for and eye and the world goes blind, the law should work to prevent criminals from further harming others and a truly merciful god would send everyone to heaven, no point punishing someone in hell after everyone is dead and can't cause each other harm anymore.
If saying that even the worst people should go to heaven doesn't speak about my morals and mercy then I don't know what does.
The term utilitarian scares me, though, because of my general principle of non-aggression. Strict utilitarianism means it's okay to harm someone innocent so long as it is a net benefit to the group as a whole. Boo to that, imo.