Philosophy and the Science of .. - YaleCourses

          18/26 Videos
1
1. Introduction
YaleCourses
00:42:51
3
3. Parts of the Soul I
YaleCourses
00:45:05
4
4. Parts of the Soul II
YaleCourses
00:45:05
7
7. Flourishing and Attachment
YaleCourses
00:37:46
8
8. Flourishing and Detachment
YaleCourses
00:43:29
9
9. Virtue and Habit I
YaleCourses
00:40:10
10
10. Virtue and Habit II
YaleCourses
00:44:39
12
12. Utilitarianism and its Critiques
13
13. Deontology
YaleCourses
00:46:13
14
14. The Trolley Problem
YaleCourses
00:48:35
15
15. Empirically-informed Responses
YaleCourses
00:49:39
16
16. Philosophical Puzzles
YaleCourses
00:47:29
17
17. Punishment I
YaleCourses
00:44:38
18. Punishment II
YaleCourses
00:48:33
20
20. The Prisoner's Dilemma
YaleCourses
00:47:15
21
21. Equality
YaleCourses
00:45:53
22
22. Equality II
YaleCourses
00:45:43
23
23. Social Structures
YaleCourses
00:49:18
24
24. Censorship
YaleCourses
00:45:22
25
25. Tying up Loose Ends
YaleCourses
00:44:15
26
26. Concluding Lecture
YaleCourses
00:48:26

18. Punishment II

14 Views
YaleCourses
YaleCourses
5 subscribers
0

Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature (PHIL 181)

The lecture begins with a consideration of the traditional consequentialist account of punishment---that punishment is justified by its deterrent effect on future crimes. Traditional criticisms of the view are presented, and John Rawls' two-level justification for punishment is offered as one possible way to avoid such criticisms by bringing together consequentialist and deontological justifications of punishment in a single theory. Next, Professor Gendler reviews some empirical research on punishment intuitions, including data on moral outrage and the "Knobe effect". The lecture concludes with a brief discussion of how moral luck interacts with intuitions about punishment.

00:00 - Chapter 1. Consequentialist Justifications of Punishment
15:05 - Chapter 2. Two-Level Theories of Punishment
22:16 - Chapter 3. Empirical Research on Punishment
41:54 - Chapter 4. Luck and Punishment

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://oyc.yale.edu

This course was recorded in Spring 2011.

Show more
100% online learning from the world's best universities, organisations and Instructors

 0 Comments sort   Sort By