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Punishment as Language

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2009

Igor Primoratz
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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A number of philosophers and legal scholars have pointed out a fact about punishment that had not been sufficiently appreciated by many traditional accounts, utilitarian, retributive, or ‘mixed’: that evil inflicted on the person punished is not an evil simpliciter, but rather the expression of an important social message—that punishment is a kind of language. The message which it is seen to communicate can broadly be described as condemnation by society of the crime committed. In what is still the only attempt at a general and critical discussion— Anthony Skillen's ‘How to say Things with Walls’—this way of understanding punishment is termed ‘expressionism’. In this paper I propose to sort out the main varieties of expressionism in the philosophy of punishment, and to discuss some of their pros and cons.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1989

References

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25 An earlier, much shorter version of this paper was read at the 12th International Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg am Wechsel, Austria, in August 1987.