DentArthurDent wrote:
I find this view particularly abhorrent, in effect you are saying "you have a malfunctioning brain, as a society we cannot be bothered looking after you - in a secure facility that will care for you in a humane - ,instead we are going to kill you"
The sick and in our society should be cared for regardless of their illness. if that illness requires their removal from free society so be it, but that does not mean the conditions in which they are contained should be anything less than what is required to maintain them in a decent state of mind (notwithstanding their brain disorder) and body.
Is it your position that the death penalty should not be invoked at any point in time? It seems to me that the death penalty is most humane in situations in which the person who is the problem has an incurable condition that causes themselves to permanently be a threat to themselves or others and particularly in cases where the person in question has problems that degrade/eliminate their moral faculties.
That being said, in some sense, I care a lot less about ethics than a lot of people. Cure a sick person or kill them, in either case it is just a changing of the arrangement of atoms. The only people who are going to care are them, and us. And if they don't even have regard for morality, then what moral complaint can they lodge against us? How can they really morally dialog with us? What makes them really different than a rabid dog, other than the accident of having a human genome? Perhaps I am being too cold though.