Storm Raven said:
Burr's political career was destroyed by the illegal duel, and he was considered an outcast from society after the duel. yeah, that was considered "good" and "right" at the time.
Psst! I already said that that was the very end of the socially accepted dueling period. The reason they did it was because there was a long tradition of it being considered the "right" thing to do.
And you can't exactly say that what he did was illegal if the courts dismissed the charges against him, can you?
Storm Raven said:
Hmm, Hickock claimed self-defense, after he was arrested and tried for manslaughter. It doesn't sound like his actions were considered particularly good at the time. He was only acquited because the jury bought the argument that Tutt had acted first. Otherwise, he likely would have been convicted, as many other gunslingers of the era were. Earp and Holliday acted under the authority of law, even if they may have abused that authority, and many condemned them at the time, and they were actually charged with murder, and although the charges weren't sustained the judge roundly criticized them. Public opinion was so against them at the time, that after their vendetta ride Earp and Holliday had to uproot and leave the Arizona Territory. That doesn't sound like they were lauded as heroes (and they weren't, until much later when Earp got to publicize his accounts of the activities, after most of his opponents were dead).
No, you're inputting your own bias in there. I've read plenty of sources on this, and they all seem to indicate that they were acquitted or had their charges dismissed because the juries viewed their acts as acceptable. You're really straining to get around that basic fact which runs through the majority of historical duels; they were seen by society as acceptable, which is why they were engaged in. They really only caused problems 1) when someone didn't follow the rules for proper dueling, which could lead to murder charges, or 2) when society started turning against dueling as an acceptable practice.
Wyatt Earp was arrested because there were competing claims about how exactly the gunfight had been handled. When unbiased testimony came forward and showed that the complaints about Earp's actions were likely made by witnesses biased against him, the charges were dropped. Judge Spicer didn't criticise Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday for their role in the gunfight at the OK Corrall, he criticized Virgil Earp for his temporary deputizing of Wyatt and Holliday. You also are apparently now conflating reaction to the OK Corrall and reaction to the Vendetta ride, which were too different things altogether.
Storm Raven said:
Most gunfights at the time involved lawmen (like the Four Dead in Five Seconds Gunfight), resulted in muder charges (like the Gunfight in Hide Park), and many times the only reason no one was prosecuted was poor communications (it was still possible to go to the next territory and vanish from sight).
While that may have been true in some cases, many times they actually were charged and even brought to trial, and then acquitted or had the charges dismissed because
their actions were considered acceptable in that society at that time. You also very noticably forget to mention plenty of other famous duels; Samuel Martin challenged John Wilkes to to a duel in the House of Commons no less. Prince Frederick, Duke of York fought a highly publicized duel with Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Lennox that was reported in the Times (granted, no one was killed in that case.) Heck, Andrew Jackson went on to be elected President of the USA after killing an opponent in a duel.
You're really having to twist things to say that dueling was viewed as evil and lawless by society. That simply is not the case and the only way you can come to that conclusion is by ignoring tons and tons of evidence.