R
Ray_Scheel
Guest
The term was used correctly. From Dictionary.com, American Heritage: “out-li-er 2. A value far from most others in a set of data” As I mentioned previously, it suggests one is trying to be difficult for the sake of being difficult when insisting on applying a very restrictive interpretation to try to raise an objection that is not present in the straightforward reading.“Outliers” is impromperly used term in the above statement.
Yes, I work for an entity on the rehabilitation side within the Texas state prison system, know several of the staff members of the research and training division of one of the premier criminal justice programs in the nation, and have regular communication with counterparts in various other states, facts of which you are reminded in almost every thread when you feign surprise that I am involved with the criminal justice system. I’m not quite sure where you were going with the second question you had rolled up in there, perhaps you could restate now that the premises you were trying to suggest have once again been corrected.So, now you know people “people who work in the criminal justice field” and what ‘agree’ or ‘vehemently agree’ which is correct?
Also from Dictionary.com’s own dictionary: “li-cense: 1.formal permission from a governmental or other constituted authority to do something, as to carry on some business or profession.”This is the heart of the issue posted, the Church recognizes the state, it does not recognize the state with license. The Church recognizes the state’s authority within the context of proper interpretations of Moral Natural Law to act.
and their American Heritage:“1. Official or legal permission to do or own a specified thing. See Synonyms at permission.”
Incidentally, over at permission you’ll find authorize as a synonym - to say a State has “Authority” but not “license” to try to build your case is a bit of hair-splitting not supported by the meanings of the words, but I’ll entertain the notion for the sake of arguing further:
Since Natural Moral Law is a subset of Natural Law, and the Church acknowledges that under Natural Law the State has the full authority (which clearly involves a grant of license) to make the determination of when use of the death penalty is required to protect society, how can the subset possibly take away the license that had already been granted fully and irrevocably *without *resorting to the using the sort of selective interpretations and linguistic mangling on Church teaching that you’ve also been directing at your opponents in this thread?