M
marci
Guest
This is what I was referring to when I said the church has “changed” it’s view of the DP. And it’s not just Aquinas.The protection of society is one of the four aims of punishment but it is not the primary one. The primary goal is to “redress the disorder caused by the offense.” That is, the primary goal is justice, not protection.
All punishment is punitive, all sins deserve punishment, and it is the duty of the state to inflict a punishment proportional to the severity of the crime.
Aquinas (II/II 158 1 ad 3) “It is unlawful to desire vengeance considered as evil to the man who is to be punished, but it is praiseworthy to desire vengeance as a corrective of vice and for the good of justice; … when revenge is taken in accordance with the order of judgment, it is God’s work, since he who has power to punish “is God’s minister” as stated in Romans 13:4.”
This is backwards: it is justice that demands not simply punishment but punishment equal to the severity of the sin, and for some sins the only just punishment is the life of the sinner.
Ender
It seems to me that JPII took the justification from “vengeance as a corrective of vice and for the good of justice” to “only for the protection of society”.
This turn has taken the “punitive” aspect completely out of the debate and embraced the “protection of society” argument to the forefront. Since this the ability of further crime is severly limited in the penal system (at least in the states) it, by nature of the argument, deems the DP almost impossible to implement. (although the ability to harm other inmates and guards is very real and plausible, and they are part “society”)
This is the problem with JPII “protection” argument. It throughs out a milenia of the punitive teaching on the DP
What do you think?