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127 Yale L. J. 2342 (2017-2018)
Why Is It Wrong to Punish Thought

handle is hein.journals/ylr127 and id is 2427 raw text is: GABRIEL S. MENDLOW
Why Is It Wrong To Punish Thought?
A B ST R ACT. It's a venerable maxim of criminal jurisprudence that the state must never punish
people for their mere thoughts -for their beliefs, desires, fantasies, and unexecuted intentions.
This maxim is all but unquestioned, yet its true justification is something of a mystery. In this
Essay, I argue that each of the prevailing justifications is deficient, and I conclude by proposing a
novel one. The proposed justification captures the widely shared intuition that punishing a person
for her mere thoughts isn't simply disfavored by the balance of reasons but is morally wrongful in
itself, an intrinsic (i.e., consequence-independent) injustice to the person punished. The proposed
justification also shows how thought's immunity from punishment relates to a principle of free-
dom of mind, a linkage often assumed but never explained. In explaining it here, I argue that
thought's penal immunity springs from the interaction of two principles of broad significance: one
familiar but poorly understood, the other seemingly unnoticed. The familiar principle is that per-
sons possess a right of mental integrity, a right to be free from the direct and forcible manipulation
of their minds. The unnoticed principle, which I label the Enforceability Constraint, is that the state's
authority to punish transgressions of a given type extends no further than its authority to thwart
or disrupt such transgressions using direct compulsive force. Heretofore unexamined, the Enforce-
ability Constraint is in fact a signal feature of our system of criminal administration, governing the
scope and limits of the criminal law.

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