Do you support the death penalty?

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Retribution is to be an element of punishment, but frankly it seems that the Church doesn’t agree with your interpretation that retribution comes first, and the perpetrator’s intrinsic human dignity comes second.
The primary objective of punishment is to redress the disorder caused by the crime. Any punishment that is just is not an affront to human dignity. The Church has always recognized the State’s right to use capital punishment therefore she cannot believe the punishment to be unjust … therefore it cannot violate human dignity.
The Catechism tells us that the primary objective of punishment is to redress of the disorder caused by the crime. You see it as only retribution. You lump all other responses into “protection” and “deterrence.”
The Church teaches that punishment has four objectives: retribution, protection, deterrence, and rehabilitation. What I said was that protection and deterrence cannot possibly be considered as redressing the disorder of past crimes as their focus is exclusively on preventing new ones. Nor can rehabilitation be said to redress past disorders because, even if a person repents of his crime his repentance does nothing to atone for it. That only leaves retribution.

The primary purpose of the punishment which society inflicts is "to redress the disorder caused by the offence. Public authority must redress the violation of personal and social rights by imposing on the offender an adequate punishment for the crime (JPII)

It is the punishment which redresses the disorder, not the effect the punishment has.

*The third justifying purpose for punishment is **retribution **or the restoration of the order of justice which has been violated by the action of the criminal. *(USCCB, 1980) The USCCB just listed the purposes, it did not order them so there is no significance in their listing retribution third.
So yes, the Church has always said that states have the right to use capital punishment, but it would have acknowledged all along that the criminal still has dignity simply by being a person. Do you claim that the Church in the past thought that the criminal lost all human dignity by performing a crime?
I deny that that killing a person in war, in self defense, or as an execution is an affront to that person’s dignity and I have yet to hear any argument to sustain the contention that it is.

Ender
 
Ender, let me continue the conversation… I keep homing in on the four purposes of punishment and how that ties in with the necessity to “redress” the disorder caused by the crime.

I agree that protection and deterrence do not redress past disorder. That leaves retribution and rehabilitation.

You seem to cling so dearly to retribution! Why? If I break my leg and it is set in a cast to heal, that is REHABILITATING the breakage, right?

So please concur that rehabilitation can also somehow relate to redressing a past wound.
 
I agree that protection and deterrence do not redress past disorder. That leaves retribution and rehabilitation.
Agreed.
You seem to cling so dearly to retribution! Why?
Because I’m pretty sure that’s what is meant by the phrase “redressing the disorder.” Didn’t you read the citations I provided?
If I break my leg and it is set in a cast to heal, that is REHABILITATING the breakage, right?
So please concur that rehabilitation can also somehow relate to redressing a past wound.
Perhaps so, but wounds are not sins and with sin there is a threefold order that has been violated and this at best addresses only one of them.

*Now each of these orders is disturbed by sin, for the sinner acts against his reason, and against human and Divine law. Wherefore he incurs a threefold punishment; one, inflicted by himself, viz. remorse of conscience; another, inflicted by man; and a third, inflicted by God. *(Aquinas, Summa Theologica)

Sin deserves punishment and the sinner can only pay the debt he has incurred through that punishment. I think it would help people accept that retribution is the primary objective of punishment if they understood why it is primary.

*the act of sin makes man deserving of punishment, in so far as he transgresses the order of Divine justice, to which he cannot return except he pay some sort of penal compensation, which restores him to the equality of justice *(Ibid)

What is man’s ultimate objective? Isn’t it obtaining salvation? If the path to that salvation involves receiving punishment for our sins then how have we helped a person return to the “order of Divine justice” if we withhold the punishment his crime deserves and which is necessary to restore him to the “equality of justice”?
  • And since man’s good is manifold, viz. good of the soul, good of the body, and external goods, it happens sometimes that man suffers the loss of a lesser good, that he may profit in a greater good, as when he suffers loss of money for the sake of bodily health, or loss of both of these, for the sake of his soul’s health and the glory of God.* (Ibid)
Ender
 
If Retribution is so great then why dont we rape rapists? Is there a line that society draws when it comes to what it is willig to do in the name of punishment? I beleive there is, the retribution must be proportional to society’s values. This is why we dont rape rapists and why we shouldnt kill people who kill people.

The condemned man dies two deaths
 
i’d like to point out that so-called “death prone” jurors, those who make it through the voir dire (jury selection under lawyer scrutiny) part of a capital punishment trial, have been scienfically been determined to be much more likely to vote guilty. that is, people who believe the death penalty to be just and fair (versus people, like many members of this forum contributing to this thread) are much more likely to return a verdict of guilty in any case, including death penalty cases.

furthermore, in places where the death penalty has been abolished, murder and other capital crime rates have usually gone down, not up, and in places where the death penalty is still in existence, like texas, murder and other capital crimes are rampant, indicating that the death penalty does not have the desired effect of reducing murder and other heinous crimes.

whitecrayon
 
If Retribution is so great then why dont we rape rapists?
Retribution is the demand of justice and justice does not oblige us to visit the criminal with the same crime he committed but to apply a punishment of commensurate severity. At least, that’s what the Church teaches.
Is there a line that society draws when it comes to what it is willig to do in the name of punishment? I beleive there is, the retribution must be proportional to society’s values.
No, the retribution must be commensurate with the severity of the crime, not the values of a particular society.

Punishment is proportionate to sin in point of severity, both in Divine and in human judgments. (Aquinas)
This is why we dont rape rapists and why we shouldnt kill people who kill people.
We execute people who murder because that is the only punishment with a severity commensurate with the crime … and because God said that we should.

Ender
 
Most, not all, but MOST criminals do NOT get rehabilitated in prison.

I am 100% FOR the death penalty.
 
Because I’m pretty sure that’s what is meant by the phrase “redressing the disorder.” Didn’t you read the citations I provided?
Yes I did. And not one of them says that the primary objective of punishment is retribution. That is a leap that you have made, and refuse to budge from despite numerous, lucid explanations up to and including our Catechism.
Perhaps so, but wounds are not sins and with sin there is a threefold order that has been violated and this at best addresses only one of them.
The broken leg was merely an analogy. But you now see how rehabilitation can be a form of redressing a past disorder!
Now each of these orders is disturbed by sin, for the sinner acts against his reason, and against human and Divine law. Wherefore he incurs a threefold punishment; one, inflicted by himself, viz. remorse of conscience; another, inflicted by man; and a third, inflicted by God. (Aquinas, Summa Theologica)

Sin deserves punishment and the sinner can only pay the debt he has incurred through that punishment. I think it would help people accept that retribution is the primary objective of punishment if they understood why it is primary.

the act of sin makes man deserving of punishment, in so far as he transgresses the order of Divine justice, to which he cannot return except he pay some sort of penal compensation, which restores him to the equality of justice (Ibid)
No one is saying that punishment is inappropriate. The question is whether taking the criminal’s life for the mere purpose of retribution is appropriate. You insist that it is. The Catholic Church says that it is not. Again, refer to paragraph 2267 and notice that the death penalty is appropriate ONLY if other non-lethal means are inadequate. As stated earlier, our Church would never impose such a caveat if pure retribution is the primary focus.
 
Retribution is the demand of justice and justice does not oblige us to visit the criminal with the same crime he committed but to apply a punishment of commensurate severity. At least, that’s what the Church teaches.
No, the retribution must be commensurate with the severity of the crime, not the values of a particular society.
com·men·su·rate/kəˈmensərit/
Adjective: Corresponding in size or degree; in proportion
So we are forced to abandon eye for an eye and a punish in proprtion to how severe the crime was, sounds fair enough.

So other than “because God says so” (which I find persuasive as a CAtholic but worry that we shouldnt be killing noncatholics because “our God says so”) why can we visit the criminal with the same act for murder?

Why dosn’t justice allow us to force the criminal to undergo the crime which he has committed?
 
Yes I did. And not one of them says that the primary objective of punishment is retribution.
*“The third justifying purpose for punishment is **retribution **or **the restoration of the **order of justice which has been violated by the action of the criminal.” *(USCCB)

How can retribution - or “the restoration of the order of justice” - mean anything other than “to redress the disorder”?
That is a leap that you have made, and refuse to budge from despite numerous, lucid explanations up to and including our Catechism.
Numerous? There hasn’t been even one and certainly there is nothing in the Catechism to clarify the point.
The broken leg was merely an analogy. But you now see how rehabilitation can be a form of redressing a past disorder!
No. As I pointed out, physical rehabilitation has nothing to do with the restoration of the moral order which has been disturbed by sin.
The question is whether taking the criminal’s life for the mere purpose of retribution is appropriate.
Retribution is ordered to justice so your claim is that execution is not appropriate merely to obtain justice, which is actually the only objective that makes it appropriate.

*- “We speak of merit and demerit, in relation to retribution, rendered according to justice.” *(Aquinas)
*- “…by means of punishment the equality of justice is restored.” *(Ibid)
The Catholic Church says that it is not. Again, refer to paragraph 2267 and notice that the death penalty is appropriate ONLY if other non-lethal means are inadequate. As stated earlier, our Church would never impose such a caveat if pure retribution is the primary focus.
Ah, yes, you have put your finger on the problem with 2267. It in fact says nothing whatever about the primary objective of punishment. As you have acknowledged, protection - which is all that section addresses - is only a secondary objective. You assume that retributive justice cannot be the primary objective because that makes a hash of 2267. Nonetheless, punishment is the effect of justice and that is the primary objective.

Ender
 
So we are forced to abandon eye for an eye and a punish in proportion to how severe the crime was, sounds fair enough.
It’s what the Church teaches so it’s good enough for me.
So other than “because God says so” (which I find persuasive as a Catholic but worry that we shouldn’t be killing non-catholics because “our God says so”) why can we visit the criminal with the same act for murder?
If the Church teaches the truth then it is the truth for everyone, not just Catholics. As for punishments, they are limited to certain forms: humiliation, beating, fines, imprisonment, and death (Aquinas lists eight but we no longer employ exile, retaliation, or slavery).

Ender
 
So why dosent justice let us rape rapists but it allows us to kill murderers?

Expound on that, if it is a question of proportionality to the severity of the sin, then why dont we just do unto others what they did to someone else, surely nothing else could be more commensurate with the severity of their sin?

 
So why dosent justice let us rape rapists but it allows us to kill murderers?

Expound on that, if it is a question of proportionality to the severity of the sin, then why dont we just do unto others what they did to someone else, surely nothing else could be more commensurate with the severity of their sin?
The cruelty of the crime does not excuse cruelty in punishment. Mere revenge is not the objective.

The Law, even in correcting and punishing, aims at the good of men. (Clement of Alexandria)
    • For Gregory says (Moral. xx, 5): “Let there be love, but not that which enervates, let there be severity, but without fury, let there be zeal without unseemly savagery, let there be piety without undue clemency.”*
  • Wherefore, properly speaking, brutality or savagery applies to those who in inflicting punishment have not in view a default of the person punished, but merely the pleasure they derive from a man’s torture.
  • *Remission of punishment is not a vice, except it disregard the order of justice, which requires a man to be punished on account of his offense, and which cruelty exceeds. *(Aquinas)
“But penalties must be applied.” I don’t deny it, I don’t forbid it; only let it be done in a spirit of love, a spirit of caring, a spirit of reforming. (Augustine)

Ender
 
Ok then we have a crime: murder and a punishement that fits the crime: Life Imprisonment. Case closed.
 
Ok then we have a crime: murder and a punishment that fits the crime: Life Imprisonment. Case closed.
If you haven’t tried to make a case you can hardly consider the debate closed and an assertion is not an argument. Besides, earlier you said you found it persuasive that God had set the punishment for murder at death - are you recanting that position now?

Ender
 
Ok then: do you agree with the assertion that life in prison is a valid punishment for all murders but that it is not the only valid punishment for murder
 
Ok then: do you agree with the assertion that life in prison is a valid punishment for all murders but that it is not the only valid punishment for murder
No, I specifically reject this claim. Although there are always exception, in general the proper punishment for murder is death.

Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man.

Ender
 
Why did Vatican City abolish the DP in 1969, if it is the only just punishment for murder?
 
*"*The third justifying purpose for punishment is **retribution **or **the restoration of the **order of justice which has been violated by the action of the criminal." (USCCB)
Permit me to quote from your earlier post: “The position expressed in the catechism is a prudential opinion; it is not doctrine and we have no obligation to assent to it.”

Since you make such bold statements such as “I reject this claim” and “we have no obligation to assent to” the Catechism, etc., then why should I heed a lone statement by a national conference of bishops, which is WAY below the Catechism in terms of authority?
Do you see the logical dilemma in rejecting certain Church statements here and there but then tossing one in from a lower authority that seems to suit your views?
How can retribution - or “the restoration of the order of justice” - mean anything other than “to redress the disorder”?
See, this is where words get twisted. I agree that retribution is ONE form of redressing a disorder. However, I argued that it is not the ONLY form.
Numerous? There hasn’t been even one and certainly there is nothing in the Catechism to clarify the point.
Re-read posts 85, 90, 119, and 128. No authoritative document says that retribution is the primary, let alone the sole, purpose of punishment. You continue to connect some supposed dots between the phrase “redress” and “retribution,” ignoring any other possible interpretation than your own. Again, read those posts and consider how rehabilitation might also be a way to “redress.”
No. As I pointed out, physical rehabilitation has nothing to do with the restoration of the moral order which has been disturbed by sin.
But I did not claim that physical rehabilitation is a way to redress crime or sin. You are twisting the concept. I used physical rehabilitation as an example of a redress of a physical disorder. Now we can jump entirely over to the moral realm and consider how a moral rehabilitation might redress a moral disorder. Keep apples to apples and oranges to oranges, please…
Retribution is ordered to justice so your claim is that execution is not appropriate merely to obtain justice, which is actually the only objective that makes it appropriate.

- "We speak of merit and demerit, in relation to retribution, rendered according to justice." (Aquinas)
*- “…by means of punishment the equality of justice is restored.” *(Ibid)
Here we go again… retribution is certainly a PART of punishment. And we can also diverge into a discussion about justice compared to punishment, two words which you seem to falsely equate. But let me take your first statement in this quotation. If retribution is ordered to justice (I’ll concur with that), then why does retribution mean that the same act, to the same degree, be inflicted on the perpetrator? Is a lifetime sentence retribution for a life taken? Would amputation of a limb be adequate retribution? (I’m not saying these are or aren’t; I’m just probing a point of logic.) In other words, you seem to say that every crime MUST be met with punishment by civil authorities that is SOLELY for retribution, where retribution is satisfied only by turning the SAME incident back onto the offender. Please comment.
Ah, yes, you have put your finger on the problem with 2267. It in fact says nothing whatever about the primary objective of punishment. As you have acknowledged, protection - which is all that section addresses - is only a secondary objective. You assume that retributive justice cannot be the primary objective because that makes a hash of 2267. Nonetheless, punishment is the effect of justice and that is the primary objective.
This statement speaks volumes. Paragraph 2267 indeed speaks about what civil authorities are to do. And if retribution were the sole (or even primary) purpose of punishment, then civil authorities should be instructed to carry that out first, and then take other purposes into consideration. However, since your interpretation of 2267 cannot mesh with your interpretation of punishment, ergo, the Magisterium of our Church must be wrong.
 
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