Allowing judges or community leaders to weigh the specifics of a situation rather than following a checklist.
This topic explores the classic philosophical and narrative conflict between —a rigid, unwavering application of law or morality—and the nuances of human experience. The Concept of Absolute Justice 6 : Kill the Absolute Justice
Absolute Justice is a mathematical equation applied to a biological mess. It seeks order at the expense of life. By "killing" the idea of a rigid, unchangeable justice, we allow for a system that evolves with our collective moral compass. True justice should not be a cold, blind statue, but an open-eyed process that looks directly at the person in front of it. Allowing judges or community leaders to weigh the
To "kill" Absolute Justice is not an argument for lawlessness, but rather a plea for over Equality . Here is why the "Absolute" must be dismantled: It seeks order at the expense of life
Absolute Justice assumes the rules were perfect when they were written. However, laws are crafted by humans who possess inherent biases. When we refuse to question "Absolute" laws, we protect the prejudices of the past.
Absolute Justice is the idea that there is a singular, objective standard of right and wrong that must be applied universally, without exception. In literature and media, this is often personified by characters who believe the "letter of the law" outweighs human emotion, context, or consequence. It operates on the logic that for a system to be fair, it must be inflexible; if you make an exception for one person, the entire structure of justice collapses. Why We Must "Kill" It
Recognizing the human struggle behind the defendant.