Is Bradley a retributivist?

History of Political Thought 32 (1):83-95 (2011)
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Abstract

Perhaps the least controversial area of F.H. Bradley's writings relates to his views on punishment. Commentators universally recognize Bradley's theory of punishment as a retributivist theory of punishment. This article challenges the received wisdom. I argue that Bradley does not endorse retributivism as commonly understood. Instead, he defends the view that punishment is non-retributivist and serves the end of societal maintenance. Moreover, Bradley defends this view consistently from Ethical Studies to later work on punishment. Instead of holding a theory of punishment largely unique amongst British Idealists of his time, Bradley's views on punishment are far more consistent than previously thought

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Thom Brooks
Durham University

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Hegel’s Social and Political Philosophy.Thom Brooks - 2021 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2021:Online.

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