Lowpro
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2011
- Messages
- 5,399
Not sure your final conclusion is anywhere near correct. Many skilled interrogators... FBI and CIA ... have argued that they could have and did get far more significant results with interrogation techniques that did not include torutre, fear of death, bodilly harm, etc.
No one is arguing that you do nothing. The question is can the same or even better results...if results are all you are interested in, as opposed to protecting human rights and our Constitituion...without torture. The argument is that you can. So, if torture isn't "necessary" for practical reasons (and thus allowing morality and legality and the contitution to be tossed over the side), than lets get to the moral/ethical arguments.
The moral/ethical arguments are a given though and I already said that it's morally reprehensible, I think it's hard to argue that. But moral reprehensibility factors little into effectiveness of a method. So we get back to whether torturing works at all, if it works better, if it holds you back more.
The ethical/moral argument is moot on that subject which is why I don't care about it.