The Purposes of Torture

Symposium: Torture and the Stoic Warrior

The Purposes of Torture

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 25 , issue 1 , 2006 , pages: 48–61
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v25i1.31433
Author(s): Patrick Lenta School of Philosophy and Ethics University of KwaZulu-Natal Private Bag X01 Scottsville, South Africa

Abstract

In this essay, I take seriously Jeremy Bentham’s caution against treating torture as though it were a single phenomenon, susceptible to moral justification or condemnation independently of the purposes for which it is used. My aim is to identify the types of torture that occur nowadays. I discuss a number of forms of violence that have recently been identified as types of torture, including interrogational, terroristic, dehumanising and sadistic torture, as well as torture as a form of punishment. To this list of types I add a further, often overlooked, type: ‘spectacular’ torture as described by Michel Foucault. Rather than obsolete, as Foucault’s Disciple and Punish might suggest, I argue that there is no reason why a form of spectacular torture could not take place today. I consider the possibility that the torture that has taken place at Guantanamo Bay is of this kind.

Get new issue alerts for South African Journal of Philosophy