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An Analytical Study of Buddhist Ethical Concept and Death Penalty
Researcher : Uthai Kamolsil date : 12/04/2019
Degree : ¾Ø·¸ÈÒʵôØɮպѭ±Ôµ(¾Ãоط¸ÈÒʹÒ)
Committee :
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Graduate : òõ ÁÕ¹Ò¤Á òõöò
 
Abstract

The aims of this research were: 1) to study the concepts of Buddhist ethics in relations to death penalty; 2) to study the problematic conditions of the death penalty; 3) to analyze the ethical concepts and the death penalty through the qualitative research methodology and the gathered data were interpreted by means of the descriptive analysis.

The research results were as follows:

 

1) Based on the study of the concepts of Buddhist ethics in relations to the death penalty, it was suggested that Buddhist philosophy has its view that intention is a conscience. The criteria for judging good relies on the five precepts and the principles of kamma. Buddhist ethics is a rule for living together for the order and peace of society. The death penalty is considered the highest penalty imposed by the law to focus on the prisoners' lives as a legal process in which the government punishes crimes against persons who commit crimes using various methods to destroy life or to kill. It is to absolutely eliminate the perpetrator from society. The methods of execution are differentiated according to the era.

 

 

      2) The study of the problematic conditions of death penalty suggested that Thailand is one of the countries that has used the death penalty since ancient times to the present day. The death penalty is a punishment as the law of the country. As for the punishment for monks who commit crimes in Buddhism, it is called Buddha's command or discipline. The rules and regulations that the Lord Buddha set have penalties based on the faults from the lightest to the heaviest one, which is termination of monkhood.

 

 

      3) In regards to the analysis of the ethical concepts and the death penalty, it was found that the five precepts are the principles that the Lord Buddha set as a basic ethical principle for peaceful coexistence. As for the death penalty, Buddhism has an attitude that when a person has committed a serious violation of the law of the country, a penalty should be considered for that person according to that code, which is based on the principle of kamma in Buddhism. The death penalty compared to the kamma principle is classified as a heavy unwholesome act. Therefore, the person concerned with this matter should use the compassion principles: physically loving kindness (mettā-kāya-kamma), vocally loving kindness (mettā-vacī-kamma) and mentally loving kindness (mettā-mano-kamma) to those who are punished by the death penalty.

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