Imagine you have committed a crime. You might experience any number of emotional responses to what you\u27ve done, ranging from self-satisfaction to self-disgust. But however you do feel, how should you feel? The question seems especially appropriate for a conference honoring Professor Herbert Morris and celebrating his work, for no one has shed light more on the moral emotions of the criminal law. The line of thought that follows owes Professor Morris a large and obvious debt. So, once again, how should you feel when you have committed a criminal wrong? Guilty comes immediately to mind. But guilt is not the only emotion that plays a part in the criminal law. For even though guilt is the right moral emotion for some wrongdoers to experien...