My personal feeling on the matter is that impartial justice really shouldn't be, say, exciting. Like you're trying to say, it's a balance. It is and it's also no more or less than just a balance of things. People take things into their own hands on account of this kind of emphaticism, and I just don't really like that in itself. Emphaticism itself is kind of a neutral term, but there's so easily a visceral component to it when you're not channeling through the vein of the impartial system thus set up. And again, I recognize it familiarly. I also understand a somewhat necessary component of activism in our society that emulsifies that impartial system. Finally the subjective aspect is just that; subjective. It can exist on its own and I'm fine just not scrutinizing it for people on either side of the moral divide.Yukaphile wrote: ↑Thu Nov 22, 2018 6:59 am I do love the ideas of impartial justice, but the sheer number of people who are guilty of having gotten away with vicious, inhuman crimes past the normal level of cruelty, even if they "felt sorry," but never turned themselves in, is staggering when you take into account just the last three centuries. 21st century, 20th century, and 19th century. I do hope there's some kind of after-world where the guilty face some kind of sentencing to see from their victims' eyes, or are dealt pain that is in equal proportion to what they dished out. Justice is balance, and it is never about escalating and lashing out at unarmed people who personally never hurt you, huge groups of people that have nothing to do with your conflict. It needs to be measured and careful. Too many people don't do that, however. It's about wild animal passion. Sad truth of history.
That last part in consideration, I don't care about the assailant feeling sorry or not. I won't get started on public relations apologies lol. ... I don't know I guess I'm just kinda Nietzschean on the matter. That impartial system is far from adequate, but there is a societal development in spite of personal atonement in the eyes of specifically the public. Private matters, sure. Personal commitments shouldn't be left vulnerable to unaccountable perpetrators what not. We like the closure, it's how we're biologically wired even as enlightened social beings. But I don't believe that necessitates a universalization of that construct.