1st Edition

Judging and Understanding Essays on Free Will, Narrative, Meaning and the Ethical Limits of Condemnation

Edited By Pedro Alexis Tabensky Copyright 2006
    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    300 Pages
    by Routledge

    This collection embodies a debate that explores what could be characterised as the tension between judging and understanding. It seems that after a particular threshold of understanding of the basic facts leading to a given moral transgression, the more we understand the context and motives leading to crime, the more likely we are to abstain from harsh retributive judgement. Martha Nussbaum‘s essayEquity and Mercy included in this collection, is the philosophical starting point of this debate, and Bernhard Schlink‘s novel The Reader - a novel exploring the tension between judging and understanding, among other things - is used as a case study by most contributors. Some contributors, situated at one end of the spectrum of views represented in this collection, argue for the wholesale elimination of our practices of retribution in the light of the tension between judging and understanding, while contributors on the other side of the spectrum argue that the tension does not actually exist. A whole array of intermediate positions, including Nussbaum‘s, are represented. This anthology is comprised of nearly all specially commissioned essays bringing together work dealing with the moral, metaphysical, epistemological and phenomenological issues required for properly understanding whether in fact there is a tension between judging and understanding and what the moral and legal implications may be of accepting or rejecting this tension.

    Contents: Introduction. Part I Narrative, Explanation and Forgiveness: The Limits of Condemnation: Equity and mercy, Martha Nussbaum; Explanation and condemnation, Ward E. Jones; Understanding 'understanding' in The Reader, Brian Penrose; Living with the self: self-judgement and self-understanding, Samantha Vice; The case for moral complexity, Marc Fellman. Part II Free Will, Determinism and Moral Responsibility: Challenging Retributive Judgment: Moved movers: transfiguring judgment practices, Pedro Alexis Tabensky; Philosophy, determinism and moral responsibility in times of atrocity, Chandra Kumar; Is to understand to forgive or at least not to blame?, Kai Nielsen; The real me, Jonathan McKeown-Green. Part III The Ethical Function of Condemnation: Judging because understanding: a defence of retributive censure, Thaddeus Metz; Understanding condemnation: a plea for appropriate judgement, Peta Bowden and Emma Rooksby; Humanizing evil-doers, Andrew Gleeson; The unbearable space of Schlink's persona, Richard H. Weisberg. Index.

    Biography

    Pedro Alexis Tabensky is Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy, Rhodes University, South Africa