sunmaster14
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2014
- Messages
- 10,017
This, combined with your continuity argument, seems to be the equivalent of claiming that since color is a spectrum, and there is no bright line dividing red from blue, therefore red is blue. Torturing a subject who is accused of being a terrorist is clearly not the same as your examples here, which are still not legal.
I'll respond to your post specifically, but many here are misunderstanding the continuum argument. That argument runs as follows:
Suppose X quantifies the amount of discomfort or pain inflicted on a subject by an interrogator. Suppose T is the threshold for what constitutes torture, so that X >= T is considered torture, but X < T is not. Depending upon the circumstances, even inflicting X < T on a suspect can be immoral, and even criminal. For example, it would be immoral, at the very least, to interrogate an alleged shoplifter for 12 hours straight in order to find out about his accomplices, but it would not contravene the anti-torture statutes. However, in more serious circumstances, interrogation for 12 hours straight might be considered rather soft treatment (e.g. a murder suspect who is thought to have accomplices). As the need to extract information from a suspect increases, harsher and harsher methods of interrogation become morally acceptable. I would be surprised if anybody doubts this. The anti-torture statutes probably allow solitary confinement, disorientation with noise or light, moderate sleep deprivation, and dietary restrictions. If these were to be used in order to try to save one or more innocent people from imminent harm, most people would think that was fine. Now, if the stakes were raised, so that the information being sought would save dozens or hundreds of lives, doesn't it make sense to allow even harsher methods to be used? And if the stakes involved thousands of lives, and perhaps a much higher probability of success, wouldn't even harsher methods be acceptable?
The bottom line is that there is a moral calculus to be done, and if the benefit is larger, a higher cost to purchase that benefit should be acceptable. Now I don't really have an opinion on what exactly the moral indifference curve should look like, let alone be able to prove it, but I have no doubt that it is upward sloping (where the horizontal access is inflicted pain, and the vertical axis is expected - using the word in its mathematical sense - benefit).