Law in Contemporary Society

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DRussellKraftFirstPaper 14 - 03 Mar 2010 - Main.KalliopeKefallinos
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Just Punishment?

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  • Hi, Derek-- here are two thoughts: (1) I would've liked to hear more about the significance of us being part of the aristocratic class and having control over the system; (2) You seem to assume in your conclusion that people in the aristocratic class are long-run oriented: the aristocratic class is motivated to make x and y changes to the justice system, because in doing so they increase their future wealth. I thought greed kept the aristocratic class thinking short-run, though... Wouldn't they want to maintain the status quo? -- KalliopeKefallinos - 03 Mar 2010
 
  • I'm playing off your second definition, and thinking about how a community, implicated in the wrong/sinful acts of one of its members, might seek to absolve itself of guilt and thereby make itself righteous before God -- and how such absolution might obtain in a secularized world. This article gets at the basic idea: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2713065?seq=4 -- GloverWright - 02 Mar 2010
  • How do you mean, Glover? -- DRussellKraft - 02 Mar 2010
  • I wonder if there might also be a broader cultural point to make about theological justification? -- GloverWright - 02 Mar 2010

Revision 14r14 - 03 Mar 2010 - 03:44:16 - KalliopeKefallinos
Revision 13r13 - 03 Mar 2010 - 00:50:07 - StephenSevero
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