Philosophy of Law Fall 2020

Retributivism and Consequentialism

Overview

The most prominent political philosophers of the seventeenth century, such as Hugo Grotius, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke, all thought that punishment was justified only if two conditions were met:

  1. punishment would do some good in the future and
  2. punishment is only used against those who are guilty of crimes.

Bentham and Kant split those two propositions apart. Bentham articulated the utilitarian (or “consequentialist”) view that punishment is justified if and only if it brings about the best consequences. In effect, he took the first proposition and jettisoned the second.

Kant took the retributivist position that punishment is justified if and only if it is deserved. He relies on a version of the second proposition and does away with the first.

Feinberg lays out the central propositions for both views and some of the major problems with each.

Problems and impure solutions

The chief problem with consequentialism is that it is willing to punish the innocent. The chief problem with retributivism is that it is committed to punishing even when doing so has prohibitive costs or does no good.

The obvious solution is to recreate the seventeenth-century mixture: require both guilt and desirable consequences. That is what we will discuss next time.

One thing to keep in mind is that mixed views do not solve all of the problems with the utilitarian approach. In particular, the requirement that punishment bring about desirable consequences could mean that people receive different punishments for the same crime. That will strike many people as unfair.

Main points

These are the things you should know or have an opinion about from today’s class.

  1. What the utilitarian (or “consequentialist”) approach to punishment is: when would punishment be justified or not justified on this view?
  2. The retributivist approach to punishment: when would punishment be justified or not justified on this view?
  3. The chief problems with each view.

References

Bentham, Jeremy. (1789) 1993. An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation. Edited by Mark C. Rooks. British Philosophy: 1600-1900. Charlottesville, VA: InteLex Corporation.
Feinberg, Joel. 2010. “The Classic Debate.” In Philosophy of Law, edited by Joel Feinberg, Jules Coleman, and Christopher Kutz, 9th ed., 766–71. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
Kant, Immanuel. 1991. The Metaphysics of Morals. Translated by Mary Gregor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.