luke warm, on Feb 25 2008, 06:25 AM, said:
not if God *is* good, winston... it's obvious that he could have created any number of worlds, or none at all... assume none... he creates none yet he (good) still exists
and 'without evil there can be no good' was meant in the sense that if you, me, we, deny the existence of evil we also deny the existence of good
This post illustrates what I think a number of other posters have missed: that for people such as Lukewarm, the concepts of good and evil are, it seems to me, concepts that have an existence beyond being merely descriptive terms. 'Evil' lives... it can possess people and cause them to do terrible things. It represents the antithesis to good... it smacks of Satan while 'good' smacks of God.
Thus believers can tie their recognition of these concepts to the existence of the god. They can argue, sincerely, that a refusal to recognize this inchoate but real 'evil' as some kind of force in the universe, is a denial of god.
And so it is. I do deny recognition of 'evil' as some spirit or force that will pervert the mind of any human. Lukewarm's logic depends upon an unproven and unprovable major premise: that god exists. Deny that illogical and (nowadays) irrational premise, and the argument falls away.
Is this relevant to the notion of capital punishment?
I think it is.
When we approach abhorrent behaviours from the belief that such behaviours represent the presence of a malign force, we will respond in an irrational manner. In particular, we may stop (or never begin) trying to understand, from a scientific perspective, why that individual or group of individuals acted in that manner.
Take the guards at the concentration camps in WWII. Who can doubt that much of the behaviour of those guards was 'evil'? Who can doubt that the 'Final Solution' was not 'evil'?
But if history, including recent history, teaches us anything it is that ordinary people can do horrific acts if the scene is appropriately set.
If we simply say that Himmler and Hitler were 'evil', we foreclose a proper understanding of how people like that come to behave as they do and how an entire civilized nation can become obedient to their socio-political theories.
In a similar, altho lesser, vein, if we take the child-raping killer of infants and call him evil, how does that help to prevent the next child-raping killer? How does it help psychologists and psychiatrists, called in to examine or treat a young boy identify the factors in his makeup or environment that will perhaps later cause him to perpetrate such acts?
I suspect that we, as a society, are a long way from an adequate understanding of what goes 'wrong' in such people, and when, if at all, we can intervene in someone's life so as to divert these people from committing such acts.
But we are never going to get there at all, if we merely label such aberrant behaviour as 'evil' in a religious sense.
And the killing of a person because of he is 'evil' in a religious sense allows us to justify killing anyone our religion deems evil no matter what act or acts the person did. It was not too long ago that witches were killed. Doctors have been murdered by religious people convinced that the doctors were evil.. why? Because they carried out legal abortions.
When we allow the irrational superstitions of religion to control our behaviour towards non-conformists, how and where can we draw the line?
BTW, in the foregoing I recognize that many religionists are against the death penalty on religious grounds, so I don't want to leave the impression that I think most religious believers are blood-thirsty retributionists nor do I think that many today would countenance killing suspected witches

My point is that we shouldn't consider religious concepts AT ALL in the way in which we treat criminals.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari