D
Doc_Keele
Guest
No, it’s certainly not an arbitrary distinction, although it is certainly hard to understand why some criminal offences are created. To understand the distinction, we need to understand the purpose of criminal punishment. Let’s see how you do.Arbitrary distinction, at the whim of the lawmakers. Consider, there are local ordinances which criminalize the feeding of someone else’s parking meter. Such an act carries a fine (a form of punishment). Yet, the action is not harmful to the person whose meter expired, actually it is beneficial. Yet, the act is criminalized because it interferes with the goverment’s desire to collect more more money through imposing fines. Laws are mostly arbitrary. Some are more useful than others
Multiple purposes doesn’t cut it. There’s not many reasons, if you actually knew them you could list them all. 2 reasons doesn’t count as “multiple”.Multiple purposes. Discouragement for others, retribution come to mind. Also the prevention of of repeating the same act by the same person