Punishment and Retribution

B́a trước
Routledge, 15 thg 4, 2016 - 236 trang
Discussions of punishment typically assume that punishment is criminal punishment carried out by the State. Punishment is, however, a richer phenomenon and it occurs in many contexts. This book contains a general account of punishment which overcomes the difficulties of competing accounts. Recognizing punishment's manifoldness is valuable not merely in contributing to conceptual clarity, but in that this recognition sheds light on the complicated problem of punishment's justification. Insofar as they narrowly presuppose that punishment is criminal punishment, most apparent solutions to the tension between consequentialism and retributivism are rather unenlightening if we attempt to apply them in other contexts. Moreover, this presupposition has given rise to an unwieldy variety of accounts of retributivism which are less helpful in contexts other than criminal punishment. Treating punishment comprehensibly helps us to better understand how it differs from similar phenomena, and to carry on the discussion of its justification fruitfully.
 

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Acknowledgements
Theories and Justifications
Taking Punishment Seriously
Punishment and Revenge
A Taxonomy of Retributivism
Minimalism Logic and Normativity
Retributivism and the Normative Universe
Moralisms Justifications and Intrinsic Value
Desert and Valuation
Bibliography
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Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng

Giới thiệu về tác giả (2016)

Leo Zaibert is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Wisonsin-Parkside, USA.

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