Justice-as-Scalpel
Justice-as-Scalpel From Crime Needing Punishment to Sickness Needing Healing From Vengeance to Precision I. The Medical Turn in Moral Imagination For centuries, justice has been imagined as a courtroom drama: A crime. A defendant. A verdict. A sentence. But what if we reimagined the moral landscape not as a courtroom—but as a hospital? Not a criminal needing punishment, but a patient needing diagnosis. Not a monster requiring destruction, but a system infected with distortion. Not a rebellion to crush, but a pathology to treat. Justice-as-Scalpel shifts the paradigm: Wrongdoing is not merely defiance of law. It is often dysfunction within the organism of mind, community, or system. And dysfunction requires precision—not rage. II. The Anatomy of Moral Infection Consider infection. Infection is not “evil tissue.” It is intrusion, imbalance, or corruption within a system designed for health. Similarly, injustice often arises from: Cognitive distortions. ...