Addition to lecture notes on Wellman text, last updated 6-24-96.
Comments, additions, and corrections are welcome.  
Please send them to Michael Kagan
Le Moyne College Department of Philosophy
Syracuse, NY 13214
Email: KAGAN@lemoyne.edu 
Capital Punishment
XVI Is Capital Punishment ever right? Wellman,Chapter  11
A. Arguments for capital punishment 
1. Prevention 
2. Deterrence 
3. Retribution 
4. Self-defense 
5. Fulfilling a duty 
B. Arguments against capital punishment 
1. The moral law (usually conceived as
divine moral law or self-evident truth) 
2. Monstrous harm 
3. Unnecessary evil 
4. Irremediability 
5. Corrupting influence 
C. Criticisms of some arguments: 
1. The moral law 
a) The moral law via scriptures-some
traditional difficulties (contextual, higher, philosophical criticism) 
b) The moral law via intuition-if rational persons disagree can there
be a self- evident principle (discuss problems of intuitionism and
multiple systems) 
2. Deterrence 
a) the problem of reform 
b) the problem with the statistics 
c) who deterred [the dilemma]
 
back to
Kagan'shomepage