People still argue those things nowadays though. Any remotely salacious criminal story has hacks crawling out of the woodwork to gloat about how the perpetrators will be raped, and the current Attorney General has deliberately delayed introduction of mechanisms to clamp down on the practice. For a long time one of the most popular proposal out of Britain’s “let the public suggest policies” initiative was to send paedophiles to Iraq as human mine detectors.
And you’re missing the major reason for the increase in variety of criminal punishments, which is that the increase in the number of non violent crimes. I don’t think I’ll run too much risk of embarrassing myself if I suggest that mephedrone clinics weren’t considered an alternative to jail time 100 years ago.
As to gender, I was under the impression that radically post- and anti- gender views like those expressed by Julie Bindel and Donna Harroway were novel, if there are 19th century author’s with similar viewpoints I’d be happy to hear them. Again this is an issue where I don’t see any dead viewpoints, so even small increases in radical-ness increase the general width of ideas held.
It strikes me though from the prison issue that our differences are mostly over what qualifies a belief as respectable. There are many beliefs that are no longer taken seriously by liberal academics, if that’s what you mean by mainstream then I agree the 19th century showed a much broader range of opinion then ours.
Getting back to my original point, just about everything in the OP is within the range of orthodoxy of public opinion, and everything except “obama is a muslim” within the academic one, and yet they can be modeled as contrary to one another.
People still argue those things nowadays though. Any remotely salacious criminal story has hacks crawling out of the woodwork to gloat about how the perpetrators will be raped, and the current Attorney General has deliberately delayed introduction of mechanisms to clamp down on the practice. For a long time one of the most popular proposal out of Britain’s “let the public suggest policies” initiative was to send paedophiles to Iraq as human mine detectors.
And you’re missing the major reason for the increase in variety of criminal punishments, which is that the increase in the number of non violent crimes. I don’t think I’ll run too much risk of embarrassing myself if I suggest that mephedrone clinics weren’t considered an alternative to jail time 100 years ago.
As to gender, I was under the impression that radically post- and anti- gender views like those expressed by Julie Bindel and Donna Harroway were novel, if there are 19th century author’s with similar viewpoints I’d be happy to hear them. Again this is an issue where I don’t see any dead viewpoints, so even small increases in radical-ness increase the general width of ideas held.
It strikes me though from the prison issue that our differences are mostly over what qualifies a belief as respectable. There are many beliefs that are no longer taken seriously by liberal academics, if that’s what you mean by mainstream then I agree the 19th century showed a much broader range of opinion then ours.
Getting back to my original point, just about everything in the OP is within the range of orthodoxy of public opinion, and everything except “obama is a muslim” within the academic one, and yet they can be modeled as contrary to one another.
Mephedrone clinics? Do you mean methadone clinics?