To Be Put to the Question
I was, in a sense, put to the question on whether or not torture was wrong. Currently, many people immediately say 'no' and don't bother justifying their response. However, I read an article that completely turned my thinking about torture on its head.
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node=torture
It's a long essay, written by someone with the pseudonym LeoDV (at the bottom). I would post it, but the character limit exceeds what KMC allows for a single post (and it's a pain in the rear to have to divide it up into multiple posts).
Anyway, I'm struggling with the question of whether or not torture is wrong. I'm leaning towards "it's bad, but it should be allowed". Which, in itself, disturbs me. However, what the author writes sheds a good deal of truth on torture in the Inquisition.
This leads me to ponder what exactly torture is. I feel that our society has grown...soft--perhaps--and is willing to classify things as torture that are not really torture. For instance, the use of truth serum--is that torture? Some would say yes. Some would say no. I am in the category of the latter.
Should torture be allowed, it would obviously have to impose limits that would retain the humanity of both the torturer and the tortured (though one might argue that the former has already lost his). Strict regulations would have to be imposed, and torture couldn't become the first tool of choice.
Anyway, read the article. Tell me what you think.