Capital Punishment
An Ethical Analysis & Position Statement
Against the Practice of Capital Punishment
Talia Villella
Ethics Final
An Historical Overview
Issues and Relevant Facts
Application of Ethical Theories
Support for Capital Punishment
Arguments Against Capital Punishment
An Historical Overview
The practice of capital punishment is often known by other names such as the death penalty or an execution, but the basic concept is that someone convicted of a crime that is worthy of their life (capital crime) is put to death after their conviction by some form an authority figure taking the life of the convicted. There are many different methods that have been employed to take a convicted person's life and history and it is striking to read about the creativity in which brutal forms of executions have been designed over the millennia. Even the Old Testament is riddled with a plethora of different crimes that are considered worthy of capital punishment and there are millions of people around the world who undoubtedly believe that the practice of capital punishment is somehow divinely inspired and acceptable (if not required). Furthermore, followers of the Christian religion believe that Jesus Christ himself was subjected to the death penalty. Throughout the entire duration of human history, people have been put to death in many different ways such as being burned at the stake, beheaded, impaled, drawn and quarter, shot, given a lethal injection, etc., etc. But these could actually be conceived of as relatively boring compared to some of the practices that arguably twisted minds created in antiquity.
For example, one practice in China was to place a pottery bowl filled with rats upside down on a convicted persons bare chest, heating the top of the pottery with red-hot charcoal with would heat the air inside and panic the rats, and then rats would claw their way out the only way in which they could; in Ancient Athens they would use a large hollow bull that was entirely made of bronze in which they would place the convicted, then build a fire under the bull until the person burned to death, and then their bones were sold in the marketplace for souvenirs; or probably one of the cruelest methods of capital punishment ever practiced was to place and individual into a floating wooden tub (head and extremities protruding out) after feeding them large amounts of food that is known to cause diarrhea, set the tub afloat on a pond, and let them slowly rot while flies and insects attracted to the feces would begin to breed inside the tub, and then begin to breed inside the body of the individual until they died (some people would even continue feeding the person to extend the process) (Vargic).
Part II: Issues and Relevant Facts
As time has passed, humanity and civilizations have done away with many of the creative, albeit horrific, gory, gruesome, and violent practices that were used in capital punishment in virtually all the societies known to history. Furthermore, the present generation of practices used for the execution of capital crimes are comparatively mild relative to those used in the past. In fact, most of the more civilized countries in the world have done away with the practice of capital punishment conviction entirely and only a handful of the more violently predisposed countries still retain this form of punishment at all. The forms of capital punishments have slowly evolved to be less brutish over the years and the contemporary forms typically have the objective of being relatively humane in the process.
The countries that have resisted banning capital punishment in their justice system include countries such as the U.S., Sudan, China, Egypt, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Pakistan who all still execute prisoners regularly to a greater or lesser extent. Iran, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia have led the world recently respectively with the United States retaining the next position. Within the United States itself there is also mixed usage of the practice and many individual states have also banned the death penalty through some form of legislative measure. Some states have done so because of ethical or moral reasons, while other justifications are more pragmatic.
For example, the death penalty can actually be more expensive compared to a life in prison sentence...
Death Penalty This informative speech outline topic DOES THE DEATH PENALTY DETER CRIME? The outline detailed 4 APA references. It follow format detailed referenced. Please outline tornadoes OUTLINE FOR INFORMATIVE SPEECH Tornadoes Purpose: To inform audience tornadoes Thesis: Today I discuss fascinating facts tornadoes. To inform the audience about the two sides of the debate on the death penalty, regarding its justice and its deterrent effect. The death penalty is one of the
Capital Punishment In more than half the countries of the world, there is no death penalty as was the case in Australia for a long time. As many as 76 countries do not have death penalty for any crime. In Australia, Queensland was the first among the states to abolish death penalty in 1922 and the last death penalty was carried out in 1913. (Capital Punishment) In many countries, punishment is very
Our society does not truly condone or express interest in the Old Testament eye for an eye type of justice - we do not support the removal of limbs or torture, we do not force the criminal to forfeit their property (other than money) as direct restitution (criminal law does not generally include a commitment to the victim other than jail time - money is doled out in civil
The victim is unable to make peace with himself, say goodbye to his family or have his constitutional rights seen too. When a murder is committed, I believe that the perpetrator does not forfeit his rights, but rather some of the respect and convention which is usually given to a dying person. After all, what respect and convention was awarded to his victim? Many of the states which currently allow
Justice Kennedy, writing for the majority, warned about broader problems with the capital punishment. "When the law punishes by death, it risks its own sudden descent into brutality, transgressing the constitutional commitment to decency and restraint." He took into account the many dangers of the death penalty and concluded it should be restricted to homicides (Death Penalty Information Center, 2008). The main question regarding the research for or against capital
death penalty and its effect on crime. The death penalty does not eliminate murder and it ties up our legal system because of appeals and postponements. One state is now even trying to apply the capital punishment rule to other crimes. The legal system has used the capital punishment laws as a way to control minority groups. I am against the death penalty and capital punishment. The legal system has
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