Punishment and the Moral Emotions

Essays in Law, Morality, and Religion

Jeffrie G Murphy author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:27th Feb '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Punishment and the Moral Emotions cover

This collection of essays presents Jeffrie G. Murphy's most recent ideas on punishment, forgiveness, and the emotions of resentment, shame, guilt, remorse, love, and jealousy. In Murphy's view, conscious rationales of principle -- such as crime control or giving others what in justice they deserve -- do not always drive our decisions to punish or condemn others for wrongdoing. Sometimes our decisions are in fact driven by powerful and rather base emotions such as malice, spite, envy, and cruelty. But our decisions to punish or condemn can also be driven by noble emotions. Indeed, if we punish to express the justified resentment and indignation that decent people feel toward the wronging of a human being, punishment and condemnation can be seen acts of love. Once we realize the vital roles that emotions can play in punishment and other forms of condemnation, we can explore them in a variety of important ways. Jealousy sometimes causes crimes, forgiveness allows us to overcome resentment, and mercy -- inspired by compassion -- limits the severity of punishment. All these emotions may be called "moral emotions"-meaning simply that they are emotions that essentially involve a moral belief. The essays in this collection explore, from philosophical and religious perspectives, a variety of moral emotions and their relationship to punishment and condemnation or to decisions to lessen punishment or condemnation. Those interested in ethics, philosophy of law, and the nature and role of the emotions, will find much of interest in these essays by this highly distinguished scholar. "This volume brings together a number of Jeffrie Murphy's ground-breaking essays of the last twelve years on an impressive range of deeply important issues: the moral emotions (in particular, resentment, shame, jealousy, and remorse); forgiveness and mercy; the foundations of the theory of punishment; and the nature of dignity. Murphy's wonderfully clear and perceptive essays are indispensable for anyone interested in these and related topics." - Charles L. Griswold, Boston University "In this new collection of exceptionally stimulating essays a distinguished philosopher engages topics of great interest to philosophers and non-philosophers alike - the nature of guilt, shame, remorse, forgiveness, repentance, love, jealousy, punishment and their roles in our lives. Few philosophers, until relatively recently, directed any sustained attention to these significant aspects of...

Murphy regards himself essentially as an essayist who paints the big picture in rather broad strokes. He is indeed a superb essayist, and the essays in this collection are beautifully written.... This is a collection that will be read with much pleasure and instruction. * C.L. Ten, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *
In these essays we see that law and philosophy scholarship can be personal, engaged, passionate, accessible, broad-minded, provocative and disturbing. It can even supply a moral lesson. For me the lesson is that when it comes to punishment, whether justified as retributive, deterrent or otherwise, recognizing human fallibility is not just a good thing, but the essential thing; it should be the foundation on which all else builds. * Samuel H. Pillsbury, Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law , 11 (1), Fall 2014 *

ISBN: 9780199357451

Dimensions: 137mm x 213mm x 23mm

Weight: 408g

352 pages