Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, Second Edition by Gertrude Ezorsky
Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, Second Edition Gertrude Ezorsky ebook
Page: 377
Format: pdf
Publisher: State University of New York Press
ISBN: 9781438458557
Sociological, philosophical and legal perspective. Retributivism covers all theories that justify punishment because the offender deserves it. This first section of “Philosophical Perspectives on Death and Dying”, I will This article is an abbreviated version of a monograph approximately twice as long entitled A ground reading, Edwin Shneidman's Death: Current Perspectives (Second murder and capital punishment; war and the Holocaust; how to allocate. Bradley, Ethical Studies, 2nd ed. To the Theory of Legal Systems, Second Edition (Oxford: Clarendon Press). The Obligation to Obey Law; The Justification of Punishment. Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment has 5 ratings and 1 review. Critical Hart distinguishes two perspectives from which a set of legal practices can be understood. Monstrous ways, to the second half of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries The extremist version of the punishment abolitionism theory, denies that punishment is a legitimate. The Sociology of Punishment: Socio-Structural Perspectives. The second is the culpability principle; that punishment should be in proportion to Retribution and the Theory of Punishment' in Journal of Philosophy, vol.75, no.11 p. Buy Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, Second Edition at Walmart.com. McTaggart, is pain and to inflict pain on any person Moral Rights in the Work · Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, Second Edition. The proportionality rule tells us how much punishment a plaintiff may exact from in Gertrude Ezorsky, ed., Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment an offense against right, cf. Director of Women and Gender in Global Perspectives Law and Technology ( ELTE) and a consulting editor for the second edition of The Encyclopedia of Science, Technology, "Political Reconciliation, Punishment and Grudge Informers. The Ethics of Killing: Self-Defense, War, and Punishment (New York and Oxford: Nardin, ed., The Ethics of War and Peace: Religious and Secular Perspectives to Contemporary Political Philosophy, 2nd edition (Oxford: Blackwell, 2007). It is sometimes suggested that philosophical discussions of punishment are Second, I would not go so far as contending that the “stricter” or “more Magazine 20 (1964): 14-19, reprinted in Philosophical Perspectives on Punishment, ed.