Can you say "distinction without difference"?
In all the ideas you mention, the application may be a little difference, but the basic ideal is the same.
They are shag? Really? Divine justice is the same as natural justice? Divine justice is arbitrary if you go by the concept that 'it is right if God commands it'. Is natural justice arbitrary? No it isn't, it is principled. So even the basic ideal - is justice arbitrary or is it principled is quite different in just those two ideals.
Don't doubt it - try it. Justice is not a constant. The will of humans to have some sort abstract notion of justice in place within their societal groups happens often, but even that isn’t a constant. But how that notion of justice is defined - that will never be a constant. Just as the idea of 'superior being' as an abstract notion is often present in societal groups - but how that 'superior being' is defined varies greatly (this is an example…). Too many variables are present within any societal group to create a ‘constant’ across different societies as far as justice is concerned. There may be some similarities, but an overall constant isn't possible....doubt it.
Now you are working to smear me, a pattern it seems when called on your dishonesty. Instead of, in any way defending yourself, you mock and belittle me with distortions and lies. You know that my pattern has not been "walk away" when "the water gets a little hot". Some of the longest threads on this forum have been due to our back and fourth. I have stopped engaging in that because it is futile; you cannot reason with someone who refuses to be reasonable.
Shag – there have been some decent exchanges – but lately, you have been getting more and more monistic in your statements, and less and less willing to allow ‘us’ an opportunity to find out your reasoning behind them. I do question, a lot, you might see it as being unreasonable, but I am trying to understand. When you reduce everything to a single point, force that point as being 'correct' without reasoning or cause, it is hard to understand where you are coming from.
Specifically, there is this question...Don't you ever have any interest in understanding a point of view instead of just critiquing it and propagandizing? You have said you do, but your actions consistently show that you don't. Which should be believed; your words or your actions?
Yes I do shag – why do you think I have asked over and over and over again this simple question…
Show me where justice has been served.
You have claimed it was. I am looking to find out your reasoning behind this – I want to understand why you think that even in some tiny, minute form, that justice was served in this case. I want to understand your point of view – but when you state, ‘I have already shown where justice has been served to a small degree in this case,’ and then don’t really explain yourself it is hard to discuss your point of view. So, just show me where justice has been served even to the smallest degree and then we will have a starting point. I will understand your rational behind that statement, right now, I don’t have a clue why you think justice was served.
I would love to see your viewpoints on justice – the bigger picture – but without understanding this tiny basic concept, the big picture doesn’t really happen yet. Lots of little pictures make it easier to understand your big picture of justice.
It is fine to talk about it in, as you state, the 'cosmic' sense, but lets see how you arrive at that by reviewing how you feel justice is served in a far more contained atmosphere. Are you taking the ‘karma’ attitude here – Kennedy died, so karma has somewhat been served? But karma happens in the next life, not in this life. And dying of old age with minimal suffering after a long life of relative ease is by no means the end result of ‘bad karma’. In Kennedy’s next life karma will be served (customarily he will drown because of someone’s neglect when he is quite young). Obviously in his past life - the one previous to Ted Kennedy's life, he lead a very good life. That is what is traditionally viewed as cosmic justice…
Or does this have something to do with Sowell’s book? I would have then thought you would be leaning more towards ‘traditional’ justice, the path that Sowell takes, and ignore the arguments regarding ‘cosmic’ justice. And even in that book there are two very different forms of justice – cosmic – or good deeds can undo bad, or traditional justice where rules, punishment and ‘chain of command’ are paramount regarding ‘servicing of justice’.