Diamondeye wrote:
Jeryn wrote:
Just because I'm a contrary old fart, I'm tying this into a point you raised earlier...
As it applies to people, the concept that a convict can be "saved" is, for me anyway, rooted in the concept of penitence. The concept of a "pound of flesh" is rooted in retribution. There's a reason we call our prisons penitentiaries, and pounds of flesh have no place in sentencing in my concept of justice. We're strictly punishing criminals at that juncture, in my understanding. We have civil suits for rewarding victims.
I don't see anything wrong with retribution as part of justice, when it's applied after a lawful finding of guilt.
Okay I have to think about it some more then, and on further review, I think it's... tricky, but you're probably right. There's justice to be meted out to the criminal, and then there's justice for the victim. I agree that there's some reciprocity to be acknowledged there - it's not simply a case of "you've done wrong, now go learn your lesson". They've done wrong TO someone. Justice that is limited in focus to penitence on the part of the criminal would be too narrow, because the victim has some right to justice as well, and that's doubtful to be served by leaving them out of the equation in sentencing. So, I think you're right there. For some reason though, the idea of differentiating, where "this is for punishment, and this other is for payback" is distasteful to me. I guess at its root it smacks of vengeance to me, and that's tied to our baser nature.
I suppose my perspective is that in sentencing that's focused on the criminal, we ostensibly have punishment, penitence, rehabilitation in mind. That seems potentially at odds with sentencing that attempts to redress the victim - that gets dangerously close to payback, and that's a little too Hammurabi for my concept of western world justice. But you're right, the victim can't be left out of the picture.