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1 Arthur MacDonald, Death Penalty and Homicide 88 (1910)

handle is hein.death/dthphmc0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




                            Reprinted from
      THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, Vol. XVI, No. I, July, ,tg




           DEATH PENALTY AND HOMICIDE

                      ARTHUR MACDONALD
 Washington, D.C., Honorary President of the 3d International Congress of
                       Criminal Anthropology
    History shows that man has become less and less cruel. When
 one reads of the enormous sacrifice of lives for seemingly small
 offenses, there is not only a sense of horror, but a feeling of
 impatience, that such things should ever have occurred. In one
 year (I82O), forty-six persons were hanged for forging Bank
 of England notes, some of which were afterwards said to have
 been good.
    According to Plato, crime is a disease, and the incurable
 criminal should either be banished or put to death, and thus
 deliver the republic from a great danger and the criminal him-
 self from a very sad existence.
    As society has become more humane, it fortunately has de-
 veloped a horror of the shedding of blood, until now the death
 penalty is applied in practically few  cases.  In France, for
 instance, murder must be premeditated, or accompanied with
 other crime, if punished by death penalty.
    The increasing and frequently excessive indulgence of magis-
trates has lessened the fear of the law, and as a consequence
criminals have become more bold in their misdeeds. While
penalties have become less severe, public security from the crim-
inal has not increased.
    In some cases the criminal is doubtless diseased, as Plato
states, but in most instances, he is a wilful enemy of society, and
severity and certainty of punishment restrain him.
    Viewing the world as a whole, the official statistics of leading
countries' show a general increase of crime in the last thirty
   'Man and Abnormal Man, including a study of children, in connection with
bills to establish laboratories under state and federal governments in the study
of the criminal pauper, and defective classes, with bibliographies. Senate Docu-

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