1. What is your take on the Harm Principle?
2. Do you think it would be beneficial for society if the Harm Principle was indeed constitutionalized how Baker proposes?
3. What are some negative results or consequences that can come out of the Harm Principle being put into place in our criminal justice system?
4. What is your overall take on drugs and their current criminal consequences and punishments?
5. Do you find any positive outcomes from decriminilizing drug use and possession?
6. How is philosophy based writing different from other different genres of writing?
7. What is the purpose of Philosophical articles such as these two since they are basically proposals of things that should be done?
8. Do philosophical ideas such as the ones brought up in these articles ever come to live or are philosophers usually not take as serious?
UCSB Writing 2 Spring 2016
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Project Builder 1 Writing Project 2
This assignment asks of us to
investigate two distinct topics that fall under a major here at UCSB. I chose
to work with topics that fell under Philosophy because in philosophy it’s more
about analyzing situations and coming to a conclusion of what you personally
believe is the best possible solution or outcome to the situation presented.
The first topic I read about was the Harm Principle, and in the article I read
it is specifically about constitutionalizing the Harm Principle and bringing it
into effect in our society. The second topic I read about was the
decriminalization of drugs according to philosopher Douglas Husak. These two
topics eventually correlate with each other since they both evolve around
criminal actions and their consequences.
The
first article I read is titled “Constitutionalizing the Harm Principle” written
by Dennis J. Baker and he is fighting against criminal punishment for criminal
actions that cause no harm to others. Both topics are ethical issues that fight
for just and fair consequences for any given action. The Harm Principle calls
for jail and prison time only for criminals that directly hurt or bring
suffering to their victims. Baker gives the example of a woman getting raped to
clearly illustrate what he means by a crime that brings harm. A woman does not
asked to get raped, and being raped may bring physical and emotional pain to a
victim for many years; therefore, a rape crime is a crime that does require
jail time. Baker defines many terms throughout the article so that the reader
knows exactly the point he is trying to get across, because it is a pretty
tricky argument he is trying to convey and any sort of misinterpretation of the
argument may cause confusion. He also refers back to other philosophers that he
has researched in order to formulate his argument. Specifically, he refers back
to Andrew von Hisch’s theory of punishment to present just punishments for
different criminal acts that are committed. Baker is very good at presenting
scenarios that may be asked about his argument such as what if the act is an
accident, but it still brings harm. His answer to that is that bad consequences
don’t necessarily imply wrongness. Baker is out to get people with bad
intentions upon others. Not all criminals are breaking the law to bring pain
and distress to other people, but those who do should in fact be locked up in
jail.
The
second article I read was titled “Four Points about Drug Decriminalization” by
Douglas Husak. Husak is another philosopher who evolves his work and research
around ethics and in this specific article he argues for the just punishments
that should be handed out for crimes having to do with drug use. He doesn’t
touch the topic of drug production or sale, but instead focuses on possession
and use alone. Like Baker, he proclaims that people who are jailed for simply
having or using drugs are given unfair treatment. He also believes that crimes,
such as drug use, that don’t cause any harm to others should not be punished or
criminalized at all. Husak also does a good job of introducing possible
scenarios that may be thrown at him to falsify his argument and he states his
responses to those claims. Husak uses a very structured layout when he wrote
his article. He broke it up into four sections, and with this he was able to
focus one point per section. His argument is a complex one because it has so
many scenarios that may be thrown at him such as an increase in drug use if it
is decriminalized and he has to give an argument for all these scenarios that
he has worked on already beforehand. He is sticking by his argument that a
crime has to deliberately bring harm to others for it to be labeled as a crime
that deserves criminal punishment such as jail time. He argues that jail time
is not the right way to punish any sort of drug use because it will not fix the
problem at hand. In the entire article he never says that he promotes and
accepts drug use as ok, but his stance is that if a person wants to consume
drugs and is not hurting anyone along the way then he can do what he pleases.
He brings up evidence that serves as proof that indicate that if drugs are
indeed decriminalized it doesn’t mean that the number of drug usage will
increase. The way he structures the article and each section serves a specific
point that all add up together and flow in a formulated manner. They serve as a
buildup towards his concluding point in which all the previous sections mash up
and his conclusion and main argument are established.
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Project Builder 2
The piece I wrote about for my first project builder was a
serious poem about the author’s love and admiration for the beautiful game of
soccer. I feel like he didn’t really have a specific intended audience, but the
people who would appreciate and relate to his work would be people with the
same passion for the game as him. For instance, a student athlete who plays
soccer would read this poem and completely understand what the author is saying
and aiming to get across to the readers. I wouldn’t even settle on just soccer
players however. The way the poem is structured it would make sense to any athlete,
because the author doesn’t mention that he is speaking of soccer at all. He
references to the sport of which he is speaking of as “the beautiful game”, but
in a way that could be interpreted as the sport of football to a football player
or as baseball to a baseball player. I feel that was a technique that the
author used to get across not only to soccer players, but also to an athlete of
any other sport. The repeated use of the line “the beautiful game” also serves
a second purpose I believe. Throughout the poem the author writes lines
comparing the sport to a war or battle. He makes sure that readers realize that
he is talking about a sport, but he never calls it just a game. The only time
he refers it to just a game instead of a fight is when he repeats the line “the
beautiful game”. That line serves as a reminder to the readers who more than
likely are athletes themselves that it is perfectly fine for an athlete to have
a winning mentality and a desire to be the best, but at the end of the day it
is just a game that will be over in 90 minutes. I have been a competitive athlete
all my life. I have played in teams for my schools, but also in soccer leagues
outside the school, so I can relate to his poem and the passion he feels for
the game. A person who does not practice a sport competitively probably wouldn’t
understand why he refers to the sport as a battle or a war. A person of a competitive
nature will always see any task he is doing as a war in which he or she needs
to come out victorious. It is not about destroying an opponent; it is about making
all your hard work and practice that led up to the game worth it. The author
also referred to that point in the poem. He writes, “Long before I came here, I
have prepared for this day”. The game is
referred to as a battle because every player has that mentality that losing in
not an option due to the long hours of practice that were put into winning the
game beforehand. Any athlete will relate to that as well. No soccer player
wants to lose a 90 minute game that has taken long numerous days of rigorous
training getting ready for. That is why it is referred to as a battle, because both
sides have gone through the same sacrifices in order to come out victorious. The
poem is meant to serve as an ode from an athlete to their respective sport. It
is as if the poem is what the athlete is thinking of right before the beginning
of a game that they have been working hard to win for a long time. The serious
and determined tone that the author conveys in his piece serves the purpose of
inspiration. Inspiration for both the sport and the athlete. Every player who
is participating in the sport has the same love for the game, but the poem is
directed at inspiring each player personally to win their respective game.
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
Project 1: "The Beautiful Game" Poem
For my first project I chose to focus on a poem titled “The
Beautiful Game”. The poem was published in 2013 by Joseph Furdeck. The sport of
soccer has always been referred to as “the beautiful game” because of its’
immense popularity all across the globe. The poem has a serious tone, and a
detail of it that I found interesting was that it did not mention once that the
sport being talked about was soccer. It describes the feeling that a soccer
player feels when he or she steps onto the field before a game. I have played
soccer all my life, so the description of the field and the feeling of energy
that he describes is very familiar to me. I feel the author’s passion for the
game throughout the poem, in particular the couple of lines that state, “This
is our fight, It is our moment, it is what we know, What we live for”. An
intensity that only a devoted athlete would have is felt throughout the poem by
the diction the author utilizes. He compares the game between two teams as a
battle and a fight. In this poem the sport of soccer is not simply a sport, but
rather a fierce contest in which no player wants to be part of the team that
emerges as the loser at the finale. The author also demonstrates a sort of
competitive sportsmanship in which he admits that there is no doubt that he is
the most determined to come out victorious, but he also describes looking over
to this opponents in the pre-game and he notices the same determined
expressions in their faces and body that he possesses. This poem is not very
long at all, but it covers pretty much every part of what a soccer player
experiences building up to a very important and crucial match. He begins the
poem with a stanza describing how he was born to play the game and be the best
at it. He goes on to share the long time he has been practicing the game before
leading up to the point in which he is at now. The entire poem describes a
person who obviously has love for the game, but more than anything a person who
has an obsession with winning and being the best at what he does which is the
mentality of a true athlete. The only true indication of simply loving to play
the game is how he both begins the poem and ends it. He begins it and ends it
with the simple line, “The Beautiful Game”. That is definitely the most
powerful line of the poem because he goes on to describe his passion and his
immense competitiveness he has for the game before he finishes it off again by
describing it as simply beautiful above anything else.
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