So will punishing future crimes. If people see that criminals have a history of being punished in their past “for no reason”, they won’t wan’t to become criminals as much.
If it appears to be happening “for no reason”, most people will infer a much more plausible causal explanation than time-traveling punishment — for instance, that this type of hardship contributes to people becoming criminals.
Upvoted. If my wallet is stolen, there has got to be an amazing amount of evidence before the hypothesis ‘a time traveler is punishing me for future crimes’ would even enter my consciousness. I think that this actually might have an Occam prior low enough that I should start seriously doubting my own sanity before I assign a significant probability to it.
Wasn’t there some Twilight Zone episode about this, where a Jewish time traveller used a mind-control device to torment Hitler, which caused his anti-semitism?
Of course it wouldn’t be time travel. People who were especially good at predicting other people’s life paths would just do so and punish accordingly, or something.
Edit: I accept your point that future consequences don’t suffice to justify time-travelling punishment.
Of course, this arrangement doesn’t even require the ability to predict the future (or travel into the past), as long as you pick people to punish who are deterred from crime solely by the threat of punishment. After all, once they’ve been punished for a future crime, they might as well commit it.
So will punishing future crimes. If people see that criminals have a history of being punished in their past “for no reason”, they won’t wan’t to become criminals as much.
If it appears to be happening “for no reason”, most people will infer a much more plausible causal explanation than time-traveling punishment — for instance, that this type of hardship contributes to people becoming criminals.
Upvoted. If my wallet is stolen, there has got to be an amazing amount of evidence before the hypothesis ‘a time traveler is punishing me for future crimes’ would even enter my consciousness. I think that this actually might have an Occam prior low enough that I should start seriously doubting my own sanity before I assign a significant probability to it.
Wasn’t there some Twilight Zone episode about this, where a Jewish time traveller used a mind-control device to torment Hitler, which caused his anti-semitism?
Of course it wouldn’t be time travel. People who were especially good at predicting other people’s life paths would just do so and punish accordingly, or something.
Edit: I accept your point that future consequences don’t suffice to justify time-travelling punishment.
Of course, this arrangement doesn’t even require the ability to predict the future (or travel into the past), as long as you pick people to punish who are deterred from crime solely by the threat of punishment. After all, once they’ve been punished for a future crime, they might as well commit it.