Michael S. Moore is among the most prominent normative theorists to argue that retributive justice, understood as the deserved suffering of offenders, justifies punishment. Moore claims that the principle of retributive justice is pervasively supported by our judgments of justice and sufficient to ground punishment. We offer an experimental assessment of these two claims, (1) the pervasiveness claim, according to which people are widely prone to endorse retributive judgments, and (2) the sufficiency claim, according to which no non-retributive principle is necessary for justifying punishment. We test these two claims in a survey and a related survey experiment in which we present participants (N = ~900) with the stylized description of a cr...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Theories of punishment seek to validate the use of punishments and maintain societal order. These th...
According to retributivism, what justifies punishment is a wrongdoer\u27s desert. Critics argue that...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
abstract: What we think people can be said to deserve has far-reaching implications. Desert presents...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
The retributive principle is that offenders should be punished because and only because they have cu...
Punishing a person based on low unconditional credence in their deservingness to be punished is cons...
Punishing a person based on low unconditional credence in their deservingness to be punished is cons...
Robinson supports the proposed "purposes" text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
There are two commonly recognized "theories" of criminal law: utilitarianism, which sees criminal la...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Theories of punishment seek to validate the use of punishments and maintain societal order. These th...
According to retributivism, what justifies punishment is a wrongdoer\u27s desert. Critics argue that...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
abstract: What we think people can be said to deserve has far-reaching implications. Desert presents...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
I’ll raise a problem for Retributivism, the view that legal punishment is justified on the basis of ...
The retributive principle is that offenders should be punished because and only because they have cu...
Punishing a person based on low unconditional credence in their deservingness to be punished is cons...
Punishing a person based on low unconditional credence in their deservingness to be punished is cons...
Robinson supports the proposed "purposes" text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
There are two commonly recognized "theories" of criminal law: utilitarianism, which sees criminal la...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Robinson supports the proposed purposes text of the New American Law Institute Report on Sentencin...
Theories of punishment seek to validate the use of punishments and maintain societal order. These th...