I'd rather a guillotine or hanging with head popping off like Saddam. Done is done, want minimal pain and horror.
I'm not sure why that means we fear the memory of pain, and not the direct experience of it.Just pointing out the irrationality of it. Of course evolution has programmed us to fear death, and seeing others die in terror is likely what helps support that fear, rational or not.
I'd rather a guillotine or hanging with head popping off like Saddam. Done is done, want minimal pain and horror.
By the nineteenth and twentieth centuries British hangman were very well trained, they would calibrate the drop distance based on the condemned's weight adjusted for their neck musculature from a secret observation in their cell.
How is it irrational to not want to suffer great pain during death?
You said above that the memory of a painful death is the problem, but the reminder or memory of pain is not as bad as the pain itself, at least I don't think it is.
I mean if getting your head slowly hacked off hurts, but it's okay because you'll be dead in a minute, then what is the cut-off time? Is severe pain 3 hours before death also okay? A week? Rhetorical, I won't be back to this thread I'm sure
I'm not so much concerned with the pain as I am with seeing it coming.
I'm not sure why that means we fear the memory of pain, and not the direct experience of it.
Once I used to be a proponent of capital punishment. A documentary about Stefan Kisko convinced me that it is inherently wrong. You can't say sorry and recompense an innocent man if you've killed him.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Lesley_Molseed
If you get burnt touching a hot stove, you remember that pain and (quite rationally) now fear touching hot stoves. But if you were to always forget those hot-stove encounters, you couldn't develop a fear of them.
I fully expect that if you never remembered any pain in your life, you'd be fearless. And short lived, of course.
It was the execution of Timothy Mcveigh (the guy who bombed the Oklahoma FBI Bldg) that convinced me that execution was not only a great expense, but a moral hazard. I remember a lot of the relatives who had lost family members went to see the closed-circuit execution to...."get Closure" as they called it. What they really wanted was the satisfaction of revenge, They didn't get it.
I remember how some of those people came away frustrated and bitter that Mcveigh didn't beg for his life or do something cowardly - that he endured his execution bravely. This really shattered their misconceptions - thier personal narrative (their fantasy) of the type of man Mcveigh was. Their hopes of watching their fantasy bogeyman executed while begging and whining for mercy just didn't happen. You could feel the shock-wave of butthurt that emanated from Oklahoma City from a thousand miles away. It was group insanity. It was revenge turned rancid. Above all...it was freakin' ugly and unbecoming of a civilized society.
I am having trouble following your argument.
It seems simple to me. If I must die, I would prefer less pain immediately prior to death than more pain, because I don't like to experience pain. I don't care whether the pain would "teach me a(n unusable) lesson" about avoiding pain. I already know that I prefer not to experience pain.
And I also know that, unless one believes in an afterlife, he has good reasons to regret his imminent death in most circumstances, because most of us expect that there are many enjoyable experiences which we would have, if we did not die soon, and we would like to have those experiences.
So, I don't know why you think that it's odd to prefer (1) not to die or (2) not to die painfully in particular. Both of those seem eminently rational to me. (NOTE: I don't need an evolutionary story to explain either of those judgments. Obviously, it's easy to see why evolution has made pain so unpleasant for us, but the mere unpleasantness is enough to prefer not to experience it, regardless of any evolutionary benefit or lack thereof in a particular case.)
I wouldn't expect you to care if the pain of death will teach you a lesson. It's the lessons you've already learned --the painful events you remember-- that cause your fear.
A good reason, but unrelated to the pain involved.
I don't think it's odd to prefer either (in fact it's dead common!). It's just irrational to fear the pain of death more than all the other pain we put up with in our daily lives.
No...not like Saddam. Saddam died Beautiful.
Eulogy for Saddam
By...Gary Brecher (a.k.a., The War nerd)
Edited by zooterkin:
and I do( ftfy)and would love some shots at them........You could argue the nutbags ISIS are quite inhuman
Real men don't spend months hiding in a hole.
Justice for weird mustaches!some people are only remembered for the bad things they did....this is not fair.
Even Hitler. People only talk of the bad things he did, we have to remember that the guy did kill Hitler.
Or Timothy Evans. Though in that case the exoneration came a little late; he was hanged by Albert Pierrepoint on the 9th of March 1950.Once I used to be a proponent of capital punishment. A documentary about Stefan Kisko convinced me that it is inherently wrong. You can't say sorry and recompense an innocent man if you've killed him.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Lesley_Molseed
When they are dead have they been "hung" or "hanged"?
I could never work it out
Real men don't spend months hiding in a hole.