Capital Punishment, Retribution, and EmotionAn Evolutionary Perspective

IF 0.4 Q2 Social Sciences
A. Walsh, V. Hatch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article explores the emotions behind the retributive urge as it applies to the death penalty in the United States. It is argued that the retributive urge is so strong because it engages the most primitive of our emotions, and that these emotions served adaptive purposes over the course of human evolution. Many scholars offended by the retributive instinct insist that we must put emotions aside when discussing the death penalty, even as jurors in death penalty cases, and rely on our rationality. To ask this is to ask what almost all normal people find impossible because the emotions evoked in capital cases (disgust, anger, sympathy for the victim, desire for justice) evolved for the purpose of maintaining group stability and survival by punishing freeloaders. Modern neuroscience has destroyed the traditional notion that rationality and emotion are antagonists. Brain imaging techniques show that they are fully integrated in our brain wiring, and both are engaged in decision making, but when reason and emotion yield conflicting judgments, the latter almost always triumphs. The evolutionary rationales for why emotions conducive to punitive responses for wrongdoers exist are examined.
死刑、报应和情感——一个进化的视角
本文探讨了在美国适用于死刑的报复性冲动背后的情感。有人认为,报复性冲动之所以如此强烈,是因为它涉及到我们最原始的情感,而这些情感在人类进化过程中起到了适应性目的。许多被报应本能所冒犯的学者坚持认为,在讨论死刑时,即使作为死刑案件的陪审员,我们也必须把情感放在一边,依靠我们的理性。问这个问题就是问几乎所有正常人都觉得不可能的事情,因为在死刑案件中引发的情绪(厌恶、愤怒、对受害者的同情、对正义的渴望)是为了通过惩罚吃白食的人来维持群体的稳定和生存而进化的。现代神经科学已经摧毁了理性和情感是对立的传统观念。脑成像技术显示,它们完全整合在我们的大脑线路中,两者都参与决策,但当理性和情感产生相互冲突的判断时,后者几乎总是获胜。为什么情绪有利于惩罚行为者的反应存在的进化的理由进行了检查。
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Focused on examinations of crime and punishment in domestic, transnational, and international contexts, New Criminal Law Review provides timely, innovative commentary and in-depth scholarly analyses on a wide range of criminal law topics. The journal encourages a variety of methodological and theoretical approaches and is a crucial resource for criminal law professionals in both academia and the criminal justice system. The journal publishes thematic forum sections and special issues, full-length peer-reviewed articles, book reviews, and occasional correspondence.
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