The" Guiding Commitment View" is central to Yaffe's account of attempts in general, and of criminal attempts in particular. I argue, first, that it is too wide, since it does not provide a plausible distinction between attempts and "mere preparation"; second, that on the other hand Yaffe does not do enough to justify a law of criminal attempts, rather than a broader law that would also cover endangerment; and third, that the Guiding Commitment View cannot deal with some difficult issues about the circumstantial aspects of criminal attempts
In this paper I explore Antony Duff’s claim that there are categorical constraints on the scope of t...
In a recent paper in this journal, Gideon Yaffe provides an expected utility model of culpability in...
Section I very briefly sketches an account of the nature of attempt developed at length elsewhere. T...
The" Guiding Commitment View" is central to Yaffe's account of attempts in general, and of criminal ...
Gideon Yaffe’s Attempts is a masterfully executed philosophical investigation of what it means to at...
When we define something as a crime, we generally thereby criminalize the attempt to commit that cri...
This contribution reconstructs and assesses Gideon Yaffe’s claims in his book Attempts about what co...
The intuitive idea that failed attempts to complete crimes are often themselves crimes belies the co...
In his recent book Attempts, Gideon Yaffe suggests that attempts should be criminalized because of a...
Anglo-American criminal law traditionally demands a criminal purpose for an attempt conviction, even...
There has been much debate about the relevance of punishment in cases of impossible attempts. This a...
A discussion of the law of criminal attempts usually commences with the statement that the problems ...
Most American criminal codes create an offense for recklessly killing another person, and nearly all...
R.A. Duff’s The Realm of the Criminal Law advances the literature on criminalization by providing th...
Antony Duff has had an immense amount to say about crime and punishment. There is hardly any topic w...
In this paper I explore Antony Duff’s claim that there are categorical constraints on the scope of t...
In a recent paper in this journal, Gideon Yaffe provides an expected utility model of culpability in...
Section I very briefly sketches an account of the nature of attempt developed at length elsewhere. T...
The" Guiding Commitment View" is central to Yaffe's account of attempts in general, and of criminal ...
Gideon Yaffe’s Attempts is a masterfully executed philosophical investigation of what it means to at...
When we define something as a crime, we generally thereby criminalize the attempt to commit that cri...
This contribution reconstructs and assesses Gideon Yaffe’s claims in his book Attempts about what co...
The intuitive idea that failed attempts to complete crimes are often themselves crimes belies the co...
In his recent book Attempts, Gideon Yaffe suggests that attempts should be criminalized because of a...
Anglo-American criminal law traditionally demands a criminal purpose for an attempt conviction, even...
There has been much debate about the relevance of punishment in cases of impossible attempts. This a...
A discussion of the law of criminal attempts usually commences with the statement that the problems ...
Most American criminal codes create an offense for recklessly killing another person, and nearly all...
R.A. Duff’s The Realm of the Criminal Law advances the literature on criminalization by providing th...
Antony Duff has had an immense amount to say about crime and punishment. There is hardly any topic w...
In this paper I explore Antony Duff’s claim that there are categorical constraints on the scope of t...
In a recent paper in this journal, Gideon Yaffe provides an expected utility model of culpability in...
Section I very briefly sketches an account of the nature of attempt developed at length elsewhere. T...