
Debate has long been waged over the morality of capital punishment, with standard arguments in its favor, grounded in the values of retribution or deterrence, being marshalled against familiar arguments against the practice. In The Ethics of Capital Punishment, Matthew Kramer takes a fresh look at the philosophical arguments on which the system of state execution should stand or fall, and develops a novel, controversial argument in its justification.The book pursues both a project of critical debunking of the familiar rationales for capital punishment and a project of partial vindication. The critical part presents an accessible and engaging critique of major arguments that have been offered - from the deterrence of future wrongdoing to the justice of retributory killing - arguing that they all fail to justify current practices of state execution. These chapters, suitable for use in teaching courses on the death penalty, offer a valuable restatement of the current debates over the morality capital punishment.The book then presents an original justification for the death penalty, one that is free-standing rather than an aspect or offshoot of a general theory of punishment. Its purgative rationale, which has not heretofore been propounded in any contemporary philosophical and practical debates over the death penalty, derives from a philosophical reconception of the nature of evil and the nature of defilement.As the book contributes to philosophical discussions of those phenomena, it also contributes importantly to general normative ethics with sustained reflections on the differences between consequentialist approaches to punishment and deontological approaches. Above all, the volume contributes to the philosophy of criminal law with a fresh rationale for the use of the death penalty and with probing assessments of all the major theories of punishment that have been broached by jurists and philosophers for centuries. Although the book is a work of philosophy, it is readily accessible to readers who have not studied philosophy. It will stir both philosophers and anyone engaged with the death penalty to reconsider whether the institution of capital punishment can be an appropriate response to extreme evil.
This book investigates the moral legitimacy of state-sanctioned execution by challenging traditional justifications and proposing a novel purgative rationale based on the nature of evil. Matthew H. Kramer, a scholar of legal and political philosophy, evaluates the standard arguments for capital punishment—including deterrence and retribution—and finds them insufficient to support current practices. He constructs a free-standing philosophical framework that shifts the focus from general theories of punishment to a specific inquiry into the concepts of defilement and moral evil. By doing so, he provides a rigorous normative analysis that bridges the gap between criminal law theory and broader ethical discourse.
What You Will Find
Scholars and students of legal philosophy frequently cite this work for its rigorous, original contribution to the ethics of state execution. Experts highlight the text as a challenging, dense academic resource that successfully forces a re-evaluation of long-standing debates in criminal jurisprudence.
Page Count:
448
Publication Date:
2012-02-20
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199642184
ISBN-13:
9780199642182
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