M
Marty_E
Guest
Because mercy is unique to the individual while justice is blind.So why is it impossible that that be reflected by the law?
You’ve got mercy and justice wrapped around your axle in a way that makes a mockery of both of them.Abolishing the death penalty as a sentence in civil law… is not abolishing justice. It makes a law that reflects justice and mercy.
If I commit an offense that deserves A but you as the ruler pardon me and I receive B, you have performed an act of mercy.
If we change the law so that everyone who deserves A gets B, then in the case where the individual clearly does not deserve or merit mercy, and retributive justice demands A, then I am recipient of B which is an injustice, not mercy. You haven’t established mercy, you’ve destroyed justice.
The notion of retributive justice involves setting the scales. The notion of mercy, which is personal, involves tipping the scales.
When all who deserve A get B, and none can get A, we have bad law, not mercy.
Then it’s no longer justice under Natural Law, it’s some utilitarian equation under whatever it is you think is “the common good”.We in turn incorporate this knowledge into the natural justice to more perfectly serve the common good.
Both Augustine and Aquinas taught orthodox beliefs about retributive justice. The common good involved is that human society requires a just State. When the law is arbitrary and capricious and justice is not served, adherence to laws deteriorates, and in extreme cases people take the law into their own hands.Augustine and Aquinas constantly referenced the cause of ‘the common good’ in their treatment of justice. It was never eliminated or trumped by an idea of divine retribution.
Lady Justice is the personification of the justice which the State should provide by just laws, justly enforced, fair trials, sentences commensurate with the crimes, and a scrupulous adherence to fairness.I don’t believe you could state that “justice should be blindly administered by the State”. It’s Lady Justice that wears the blindfold, not the State.
Justice, an essentially moral virtue, regulates man in relations with his fellow-men. It disposes us to respect the rights of others, to give each man his due. That’s why Justice is blind, which she could not be if she were to administer mercy.She represents the highest of human virtues.
Right. A society based on mercy rather than justice would essentially have no law.In all that she asks of us, we are to strive for what serves the common good. Aquinas says… “It is in this sense that justice is called a general virtue. And since it belongs to the law to direct to the common good, as stated above (I-II, 90, 2), it follows that the justice which is in this way styled general, is called “legal justice,” because thereby man is in harmony with the law which directs the acts of all the virtues to the common good. “
No, justice is giving to each what is his due. Look it up.It makes sense that if a general law is damaging the relationship of one to another, it is no longer serving the common good and is unjust. The State has a duty and a right to make laws that serve the common good. This is justice.
The damaging of the relationship of one to another is called “crime”, which is why we need a system of justice.
Cardinal Dulles cited an argument, he didn’t make the argument.Your other comments related to the Card. Dulles article regarding retribution, that you had earlier cited in your own argument.
I hesitate to point out that you’re making a utilitarian, not Natural Law, argument here.You simply have a skewed understanding of natural law here. Death as a penal sentence has served a purpose in the societies of our species. It was never an absolute necessity of justice like air or food is to human life (although it may have appeared so by the natural lack of knowledge).
Justice in the Natural Law involves what is due. If we commit a crime deserving A, justice is giving us A. It is giving us A regardless of what else it may do or some imagined good - singular or common.
It is an absolute necessity of retributive justice, which involves this setting of the cosmic scales to the extent that humans may do, that the State have the power to assess a penalty commensurate with the offense.
That is justice in Natural Law.
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