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5 J. Value Inquiry 1 (1970-1971)

handle is hein.journals/jrnlvi5 and id is 1 raw text is: 1

A PLAUSIBLE THEORY OF RETRIBUTION
SIDNEY GENDIN
In recent years, especially since the advent of penology as a science,
retributivism has been much maligned as a barbarous and immoral theory.
In addition, retributivists have been accused of logical howlers in developing
their views and in attacking the views of utilitarians. In this paper I shall
attempt to do two things. First, I shall discuss some misconceptions about
retributivism. Second, I shall attempt to develop a retributive thesis which
has more intuitive plausibility than previous ones have had.
I. MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT RETRIBUTIVISM
(1) Retribution is revenge. This is the most common misconception.
Thirsting after revenge is a primitive emotion which is as vigorously at-
tacked by retributivists as it is by others. Thus, Hegel, for example, wrote: 1
Revenge remains defective inasmuch as it is the act of a subjective will . .. No act
of revenge is justified.
Revenge is subjective because it is a personal response - a wild striking
back by the one who has been hurt. Or, in the case of death, when the
injured party cannot strike back, the family may set itself up as the one who
is hurt; it strikes back. In fact, revenge may be taken by anyone who feels
that he has been aggravated personally by the original injury. Normally,
one who is behaving vengefully is behaving vindictively and angrily, and
consequently such a person is not likely to be concerned with rules, telling
him now much he ought to strike back. On the other hand, one who
demands retribution in a given case is ordinarily concerned with rules as
to what is appropriate. Perhaps that is why we speak of getting revenge
and exacting retribution but not of getting retribution or exacting
revenge.
Retribution presupposes the surrendering of primitive freedoms for the
benefit of civilized society. Thus retributive justice must be lawful justice.
That is why, for example, it can be argued that lynching is not exacting
retribution. Revenge is private and personal but retribution is administered
by disinterested parties. One who takes revenge on another takes pleasure
in the suffering of his victim but one who seeks retributive justice is not
motivated in that way.
Of course we may sometimes approve in extraordinary circumstances of
someone's going outside the law to get revenge. We may think that his
1 G. Hegel, Philosophy of Right, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1942), p. 247.

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