扩大 "认识论 "论证的范围以涵盖非惩罚性丧失能力行为

Diametros Pub Date : 2024-04-19 DOI:10.33392/diam.1931
Elizabeth Shaw
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引用次数: 1

摘要

越来越多的理论家对惩罚性报应提出了认识论上的挑战。这一挑战的核心主张是,除非对某人造成严重伤害的道德论证达到了很高的可信度标准,否则(故意)对某人造成严重伤害就是错误的。这一质疑的支持者通常认为,报应主义没有达到所要求的认识论标准,因为报应主义依赖于一种有争议的自由意志概念,而我们无法充分肯定自由意志的存在。然而,认识论质疑的范围不应局限于对自由意志或报应论的怀疑。在本文中,我将论证认识论挑战应超越最初对惩罚正当性的关注。我所说的 "扩大认识论挑战 "是指要求对其他所谓的严重(蓄意)伤害的正当理由提出高标准的可信度要求。为了提供论证的重点,我将集中讨论由格雷格-卡鲁索(Gregg Caruso)辩护的 "公共卫生检疫模式",但我的论点在这一模式之外还有更广泛的影响。越来越多的 "废除论 "者认为,惩罚原则上是错误的。如果放弃报应性惩罚或一般的惩罚,我们就需要问:"我们还应该如何应对犯罪?我的论点表明,所有这些废除论者如果希望以有意实施非惩罚性的严厉强制措施来取代惩罚,就必须面对与刑罚论者相同的认识论标准。
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Expanding The Scope of The Epistemic Argument to Cover Nonpunitive Incapacitation
A growing number of theorists have launched an epistemic challenge against retributive punishment. This challenge involves the core claim that it is wrong (intentionally) to inflict serious harm on someone unless the moral argument for doing so has been established to a high standard of credibility. Proponents of this challenge typically argue that retributivism fails to meet the required epistemic standard, because retributivism relies on a contentious conception of free will, about whose existence we cannot be sufficiently certain. However, the scope of the epistemic challenge should not be limited to doubts about free will or retributivism. In this article, I argue that the epistemic challenge should be expanded beyond the original focus on justifications of punishment. By “expanding the epistemic challenge” I mean demanding that other purported justifications for serious (intentional) harm be held to a high standard of credibility. To provide a focus for the argument, I will concentrate on the “Public Health Quarantine Model” defended by Gregg Caruso, but my arguments have wider implications beyond this model. A growing number of “abolitionist” theorists believe that punishment is wrong in principle. If retributive punishment, or punishment in general, were abandoned, we would need to ask, “how else should we respond to crime?”. My arguments suggest that all such abolitionists will have to face the same epistemic standard as penal theorists if they wish to replace punishment with the intentional imposition of non-punitive severe coercive measures.
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A Fairness-Based Defense of Non-Punitive Responses to Crime Free Will Skepticism, Quarantine, and Corrections Free Will Denialism as a Dangerous Gamble Expanding The Scope of The Epistemic Argument to Cover Nonpunitive Incapacitation The Abolition of Punishment: Is a Non-Punitive Criminal Justice System Ethically Justified?
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