Volume 5, Issue 1
The Death Penalty Debate 53
The Death Penalty Debate: Four
Problems and New Philosophical
Perspectives
Masaki Ichinose
The University of Tokyo
AbsTrAcT
This paper aims at bringing a new philosophical perspective to the current
debate on the death penalty through a discussion of peculiar kinds of uncertainties
that surround the death penalty. I focus on laying out the philosophical argument,
with the aim of stimulating and restructuring the death penalty debate.
I will begin by describing views about punishment that argue in favour of either
retaining the death penalty (‘retentionism’) or abolishing it (‘abolitionism’). I will
then argue that we should not ignore the so-called “whom-question”, i.e. “To whom
should we justify the system of punishment?” I identify three distinct chronological
stages to address this problem, namely, “the Harm stage”, “the blame stage”, and “the
Danger stage”.
I will also identify four problems arising from specific kinds of uncertainties
present in current death penalty debates: (1) uncertainty in harm, (2) uncertainty in
blame, (3) uncertainty in rights, and (4) uncertainty in causal consequences. In the
course of examining these four problems, I will propose an ‘impossibilist’ position
towards the death penalty, according to which the notion of the death penalty is in-
herently contradictory.
Finally, I will suggest that it may be possible to apply this philosophical perspec-
tive to the justice system more broadly, in particular to the maximalist approach to
restorative justice.
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MASAKI ICHINOSE54
1. To wHoM sHoulD PuNIsHMeNT be jusTIFIeD?
what, exactly, are we doing when we justify a system of punishment? The
process of justifying something is intrinsically connected with the process of per-
suading someone to accept it. when we justify a certain belief, our aim is to demon-
strate reasonable grounds for people to believe it. likewise, when we justify a system
of taxation, we intend to demonstrate the necessity and fairness of the system to
taxpayers.
what, then, are we justifying when we justify a system of punishment? To whom
should we provide legitimate reasons for the system? It is easy to understand to whom
we justify punishment when that punishment is administered by, for example, charg-
ing a fine. In this case, we persuade violators to pay the fine by bringing to their atten-
tion the harm that they have caused, harm which needs to be compensated. (Please
note that I am only mentioning the primitive basis of the process of justification.)
while we often generalise this process to include people in general or society as a
whole, the process of justification would not work without convincing the people
who are directly concerned (in this case, violators), at least theoretically, that this is
a justified punishment, despite their subjective objections or psychological opposi-
tion. we could paraphrase this point per scanlon’s ‘idea of a justification which it
would be unreasonable to reject’ (1982, p.117). That is to say, in justifying the applica-
tion of the system of punishment, we should satisfy the condition that each person
concerned (especially the violator) is aware of having no grounds to reasonably reject
the application of the system, even if they do in fact reject it from their personal, self-
interested point of view.
In fact, if the violator is not theoretically persuaded at all in any sense—that
is, if they cannot understand the justification as a justification—we must consider
the possibility that they suffer some disorder or disability that affects their criminal
responsibility.
we should also take into account the case of some extreme and fanatical ter-
rorists. They might not understand the physical treatment inflicted on them in the
name of punishment as a punishment at all. rather, they might interpret their being
physically harmed as an admirable result of their heroic behaviour. The notion of
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punishment is not easily applied to these cases, where the use of physical restraint
is more like that applied to wild animals. Punishment can be successful only if those
who are punished understand the event as punishment.
This line of argument entirely conforms to the traditional context in philosophy
concerning the concept of a “person”, who is regarded as the moral and legal agent re-
sponsible for his or her actions, including crimes. john locke, a 17th-century english
philosopher, introduced and established this concept, basing it on ‘consciousness’.
According to locke, a person ‘is a thinking intelligent being, that has reason and
reflection, and can consider it self as it self, the same thinking thing in different
times and places; which it does only by that consciousness’ (1975, book 2, chapter 27,
section 9). This suggests that moral or legal punishments for the person should be
accompanied by consciousnesses (in a lockean sense) of the agent. In other words,
when punishment is legally imposed on someone, the person to be punished must be
conscious of the punishment as a punishment; that is, the person should understand
the event as a justified imposition of some harm.1
However, there is a problem here, which arises in particular for the death penalty
but not for other kinds of punishment. The question that I raise here is ‘to whom
do we justify the death penalty?’ People might say it should be justified to society,
as the death penalty is one of the social institutions to which we consent, whether
explicitly or tacitly. This is true. However, if my claims above about justification are
correct, the justification of the death penalty must involve the condemned convict
coming to understand the justification at least at a theoretical level. otherwise, to be
executed would not be considered a punishment but rather something akin to the
extermination of a dangerous animal. The question I want to focus on in particular is
this: should this justification be provided before administering capital punishment or
whilst administering capital punishment?
1. strangely, few locke scholars have seriously tried to understand the lockean meaning of pun-
ishment, which is developed in his Second Treatise,(locke 1960), in the light of his theory of personal
identity based upon ‘consciousness’, which is discussed in his Essay Concerning Human Understand-
ing. Taking into account the fact that ‘person’ appears as the key word in both works of locke, we
must bridge the gap between his two works by rethinking the universal significance of ‘person’ in
his arguments. There were, however, some controversies concerning how locke evaluates the death
penalty. see calvert (1993) and simmons (1994).
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MASAKI ICHINOSE56
2. ‘IMPossIbIlIsM’
Generally, in order for the justification of punishment to work, it is necessary for
convicts to understand that this is a punishment before it is carried out and that they
cannot reasonably reject the justification, regardless of any personal objection they
may have. However, that is not sufficient, because if they do not understand at the
moment of execution that something harmful being inflicted is a punishment, then its
being inflicted would simply result in mere physical harm rather than an institutional
response based on theoretical justification. The justification for punishment must be,
at least theoretically, accepted both before and during its application.2 This requirement
can be achieved with regard to many types of punishment, such as fines or imprison-
ment. However, the situation is radically different in the case of the death penalty, for
in this case, when it is carried out, the convict, by definition, disappears. During and
(in the absence of an afterlife) after the punishment, the convict cannot understand
the nature and justification of the punishment. can we say then that this is a punish-
ment? This is a question which deserves further thought.
on the one hand, the death penalty, once executed, logically implies the nonex-
istence of the person punished; therefore, by definition, that person will not be con-
scious of being punished at the moment of execution. However, punishment must be
accompanied by the convict’s consciousness or understanding of the significance of
the punishment, as far as we accept the traditional concept of the person as a moral
and legal agent upon whom punishment could be imposed. It may be suggested that
everything leading up to the execution—being on death row, entering the execution
chamber, being strapped down—is a kind of punishment that the convict is conscious
of and is qualitatively different from mere incarceration. However, those phases are
factors merely concomitant with the death penalty. The core essence of being execut-
ed lies in being killed or dying. Therefore, if the phases of anticipation were to occur
but finally the convict were not killed, the death penalty would not have been carried
out. The death penalty logically results in the convict’s not being conscious of being
executed, and yet, for it to be a punishment, the death penalty requires the convict to
2. There is an additional question about whether justification is needed after the execution when
the convict is no longer around, in addition to ‘before’ and ‘during’. According to my understand-
ing of justification, the process of justification must begin with making each person concerned
understand what there is no reason to reject, but that is just a starting, necessary point. justification
must go beyond the initial phase to acquiring general consent from society. In this sense, justifica-
tion seems to be needed even ‘after’ the execution. Actually, if there is no need for justification after
the execution, that sounds less like punishment based on a system of justice than merely physical
disposal.
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be conscious of being executed. we could notate this in the form of conjunction in the
following way in order to make my point as clear as possible:
~ Pce & Pce
(Pce: ‘the person is conscious of being executed under the name of punishment’)
If this is correct, then we must conclude that the concept of the death penalty
is a manifest contradiction in terms. In other words, the death penalty should be re-
garded as conceptually impossible, even before we take part in longstanding debates
between retentionism and abolitionism. This purely philosophical view of the death
penalty could be called ‘impossibilism’ (i.e. the death penalty is conceptually impos-
sible), and could be classified as a third possible view on the death penalty, distinct
from retentionism and abolitionism. A naïve objection against this impossibilist view
might counter that the death penalty is actually carried out in some countries so that
it is not impossible but obviously possible. The impossibilist answer to this objection
is that, based on a coherent sense of what it means for a punishment to be justified,
that execution in such countries is not the death penalty but rather unjustified lethal
physical violence.
I am not entirely certain whether the ‘impossibilist’ view would truly make sense
in the light of the contemporary debates on the death penalty. These debates take
place between two camps as I referred to above:
Retentionism (the death penalty should be retained): generally argued with refer-
ence to victims’ feelings and the deterrence effects expected by execution.
Abolitionism (the death penalty should be abolished): generally argued through
appeals to the cruelty of execution, the possibility of misjudgements in the trial etc.
The grounds mentioned by both camps are, theoretically speaking, applicable
to punishment in general in addition to the death penalty specifically. I will mention
those two camps later again in a more detailed way in order to make a contrast between
standard debates and my own view. However, my argument above for ‘impossibilism’,
does suggest that there is an uncertainty specific to the death penalty as opposed to
other types of punishment. I believe that this uncertainty must be considered when
we discuss the death penalty, at least from a philosophical perspective. otherwise we
may lose sight of what we are attempting to achieve.
A related idea to the ‘impossibilism’ of the death penalty may emerge, if we
accept the fact that the death penalty is mainly imposed on those convicted of homi-
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MASAKI ICHINOSE58
cide. This idea is related to the understanding of death proposed by epicurus, who
provides the following argument (Diogenes laertius 1925, p. 650-1):
Death, therefore, the most awful of evils, is nothing to us, seeing that, when we are,
death is not come, and, when death is come, we are not. It is nothing, then, either
to the living or to the dead, for with the living it is not and the dead exist no longer.
we can call this epicurean view ‘the harmlessness theory of death’ (HTD). If we
accept HTD, it follows, quite surprisingly, that there is no direct victim in the case of
homicide insofar as we define ‘victim’ to be a person who suffers harm as a result of
a crime. For according to HTD, people who have been killed and are now dead suffer
nothing—neither benefits nor harms—because, as they do not exist, they cannot be
victims. If this is true, there is no victim in the case of homicide, and it must be un-
reasonable to impose what is supposed to be the ultimate punishment3—that is, the
death penalty—on those offenders who have killed others.
This argument might sound utterly absurd, particularly if it is extended beyond
offenders and victims to people in general, as one merit of the death penalty seems
to lie in reducing people’s fear of death by homicide. However, although this argu-
ment from HTD might sound bizarre and counterintuitive, we should accept it at the
theoretical level, to the extent that we find HTD valid.4 clearly, this argument, which
is based on the nonexistence of victims, could logically lead to another impossibilist
argument concerning the death penalty.
There are many points to be more carefully examined regarding both types of
‘impossibilism’, which I will skip here. However, I must stop to ponder a natural reac-
tion. My question above, ‘To whom do we justify?’, which introduced ‘impossibilism’,
3. Is it true that the death penalty is the ultimate punishment? can we not suppose that the death
penalty is less harmful than a life sentence or very lengthy incarceration? However, this view regard-
ing the death penalty as less harmful than a lifelong sentence could lead to a paradox. If this order of
severity as punishment is valid, it may be possible to reduce the lifelong sentence (due to an amnesty,
some consideration on the prisoner’s rehabilitation, or something like that) to the death penalty.
If this is the case, prisoners given the lifelong sentence will not make an effort at all to rehabilitate
themselves, due to fear of the sentence being reduced to the death penalty. In addition, if a person
is likely to be sentenced to death, the person might try to commit a more heinous crime, perhaps
even in the court in order to be given a more severe sentence, i.e. a life sentence in prison. That is a
paradox drawn from human nature.
4. on the current debates on ‘HTD’ of epicurus, see Fischer (1993). of course, there are lots of
objections against the epicurean view. The most typical objection is that death deprives people of
their chance to enjoy life, and therefore death is harmful. However, it seems to me that “whom-ques-
tion” must be raised again here. To whom is the deprivation of this chance harmful? In any case, the
metaphysics of death is a popular topic in contemporary philosophy, which should involve not only
metaphysical issues but also ethical and epistemological problems.
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might sound eccentric, because, roughly speaking, theoretical arguments of justifica-
tion are usually deployed in a generalised way and do not need to acknowledge who
those arguments are directed at. Yet, I believe that this normal attitude towards jus-
tification is not always correct. Instead, our behaviour, when justifying something,
focuses primarily on theoretically persuading those who are unwilling to accept the
item being justified. If nobody refuses to accept it, then it is completely unnecessary
to provide its justification. For instance, to use a common sense example, nobody
doubts the existence of the earth. Therefore, nobody takes it to be necessary to justify
the existence of the earth. Alternatively, a justification for keeping coal-fired power
generation, the continued use of which is not universally accepted due to global
warming, is deemed necessary. In other words, justification is not a procedure lacking
a particular addressee, but an activity that addresses the particular person in a definite
way, at least at first. In fact, it seems to me that the reason that current debates on the
death penalty become deadlocked is that crucial distinctions are not appropriately
made. I think that such a situation originates from not clearly asking to whom we are
addressing our arguments, or whom we are discussing. As far as I know, there have
been very few arguments within the death penalty debate that take into account the
homicide victim, despite the victim’s unique status in the issue. This is one example
where the debate can be accused of ignoring the ‘whom-question’, so I will clarify this
issue by adopting a strategy in which this ‘whom-question’ is addressed.
3. THree cHroNoloGIcAl sTAGes
Following my strategy, I will first introduce a distinction between three chrono-
logical stages in the death penalty. In order to make my argument as simple as pos-
sible, I will assume that the death penalty is imposed on those who have been con-
victed of homicide, although I acknowledge there are other crimes which could result
in the death penalty. In that sense, the three stages of the death penalty correspond to
the three distinct phases arising from homicide.
The first stage takes place at the time of killing; the fact that someone was killed
must be highlighted. However, precisely what happened? If we accept the HTD, we
should suppose that nothing harmful happened in the case of homicide. Although
counterintuitive, let’s see where this argument leads. However, first, I will acknowl-
edge that we cannot cover all contexts concerning the justification of the death
penalty by discussing whether or not killing harms the killed victim. even if we
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MASAKI ICHINOSE60
accept for argument’s sake that homicide does not harm the victim, that is only part
of the issue. other people, particularly the bereaved families of those killed, are seri-
ously harmed by homicide. More generally, society as a whole is harmed, as the fear
of homicide becomes more widespread in society.
Moreover, our basic premise, HTD, is controversial. whether HTD is convinc-
ing remains an unanswered question. There is still a very real possibility that those
who were killed do suffer harm in a straightforward sense, which conforms to most
people’s strong intuition. In any event, we can call this first stage, the ‘Harm stage’,
because harm is what is most salient in this phase, either harm to the victims or others
in society at large. If a justification for the death penalty is to take this Harm stage
seriously, the overwhelming focus must be on the direct victims themselves, who ac-
tually suffer the harm. This is the central core of the issue, as well as the starting point
of all further problems.
The second stage appears after the killing. After a homicide, it is common to
blame and to feel anger towards the perpetrator or perpetrators, and this can be de-
scribed as a natural, moral, or emotional reaction. However, it is not proven that
blaming or feeling angry is indeed natural, as it has not been proven that such feel-
ings would arise irrespective of our cultural understanding of the social significance
of killing. The phenomenon of blaming and the prevalence of anger when a homicide
is committed could be a culture-laden phenomenon rather than a natural emotion.
Nevertheless, many people actually do blame perpetrators or feel anger towards
them for killing someone, and this is one of the basic ideas used to justify a system
of ‘retributive justice’. The core of retributive justice is that punishment should be
imposed on the offenders themselves (rather than other people, such as the offend-
ers’ family). This retributive impulse seems to be the most fundamental basis of the
system of punishment, even though we often also rely on some consequentialist jus-
tification for punishment (e.g. preventing someone from repeating an offence). In ad-
dition, offenders are the recipients of blame or anger from society, which suggests
that blaming or expressing anger has a crucial function in retributive justice. I will
call this second phase the ‘blame stage’, which extends to the period of the execu-
tion. Actually, the act of blaming seems to delineate what needs to be resolved in this
phase. Attempting to justify the death penalty by acknowledging this blame stage
(or retributive justification) in terms of proportionality is the most common strategy.
That is to say, lex talionis applies here—‘an eye for an eye’. This is the justification that
not only considers people in general, including victims who blame perpetrators, but
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also attempts to persuade perpetrators that this is retribution resulting from their
own harmful behaviours.
The final stage in the process concerning the death penalty appears after the ex-
ecution; in this stage, what matters most is how beneficial the execution is to society.
Any system in our society must be considered in the light of its cost-effectiveness.
This extends even to cultural or artistic institutions, although at first glance they
seem to be far from producing any practical effects. In this context, benefits are in-
terpreted quite broadly; creating intellectual satisfaction, for example, is counted as a
benefit. clearly, this is a utilitarian standpoint. we can apply this view to the system
of punishment, or the death penalty, if it is accepted. That is, the death penalty may
be justified if its benefits to society are higher than its costs. what, then, are the costs,
and what are the benefits? obviously, we must consider basic expenses, such as the
maintenance and labour costs of the institution keeping the prisoner on death row.
However, in the case of the death penalty, there is a special cost to be considered,
namely, the emotional reaction of people in society in response to killing humans,
even when officially sanctioned as a punishment. some feel that it is cruel to kill a
person, regardless of the reason.
on the other hand, what is the expected benefit of the death penalty? The ‘de-
terrent effect’ is usually mentioned as a benefit that the death penalty can bring about
in the future. In that case, what needs to be shown if we are to draw analogies with
the previous two stages? when people try to justify the death penalty by mentioning
its deterrent effect, they seem to be comparing a society without the death penalty
to one with the death penalty. Then they argue that citizens in a society with the
death penalty are at less risk of being killed or seriously victimised than those in a
society without the death penalty. In other words, the death penalty could reduce the
danger of being killed or seriously victimised in the future. Therefore, we could call
this third phase the ‘Danger stage’. In this stage, we focus on the danger that might
affect people in the future, including future generations. This is a radically different
circumstance from those of the previous two stages in that the Danger stage targets
people who have nothing to do with a particular homicide.
4. ANAloGY FroM NATurAl DIsAsTers
The three chronological stages that I have presented in relation to the death
penalty are found in other types of punishment as well. Initially, any punishment must
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE62
stem from some level of harm (including harm to the law), and this is a sine qua non
for the issue of punishment to arise. blaming and its retributive reaction must follow
that harm, and subsequently some social deterrent is expected to result. However, we
should carefully distinguish between the death penalty and other forms of punish-
ment. with other forms of punishment, direct victims undoubtedly exist, and those
convicted of harming such victims are aware they are being punished. In addition,
rehabilitating perpetrators in order for them to return to society—one aspect of the
deterrent effect—can work in principle. However, this aspect of deterrence cannot
apply to the death penalty because executed criminals cannot be aware of being pun-
ished by definition, and the notion of rehabilitation does not make sense by defini-
tion. only this quite obvious observation can clarify that there is a crucial, intrinsic
difference or distinction between the death penalty and other forms of punishment.
Theories about the death penalty must seriously consider this difference; we cannot
rely on theories that treat the death penalty on a par with other forms of punishment.
Moreover, the three chronological stages that have been introduced above are
fundamentally different from each other. In reality, the subjects or people that we
discuss and on whom we focus are different from stage to stage. In this respect, one
of my points in this article is to underline the crucial need to discuss the issues of the
death penalty by drawing a clear distinction between those stages. I am not claiming
that only one of those stages is important. I am aware that each stage has its own sig-
nificance; therefore, we should consider all three. However, we should be conscious
of the distinctions when discussing the death penalty.
To make my point more understandable, I will suggest an analogy with natural
disasters. specifically, I will use as an analogy the biggest earthquake in japan in the
past millennium—the quake of 11 March 2011 (hereafter the 2011 quake). of course, at
first glance, earthquakes are substantially different from homicides. However, there
is a close similarity between the 2011 quake and homicides, because although most
of the harm that occurred was due to the earthquake and tsunami, in fact people
were also harmed and killed during the 2011 quake at least partially due to human
errors, such as the failure of the government’s policy on tsunamis and nuclear power
plants. Thus, it is quite easy in the case of the 2011 quake to distinguish between three
aspects, all of which are different from each other.
(1)we must recognise victims who were killed in the tsunami or suffered hard-
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ship at shelters.5 This is the core as well as the starting point of all problems. what
matters here is rescuing victims, and expressing our condolences.
(2) Then we will consider victims and people in general who hold the govern-
ment and the nuclear power company responsible for political and technical mis-
takes. what usually matters here is the issue of responsibility and compensation.
(3) Finally, we can consider people’s interests in improving preventive mea-
sures taken to reduce damages by tsunami and nuclear-plant-related accidents in the
future. what matters in this context is the reduction of danger in the future by learn-
ing from the 2011 quake.
Nobody will fail to notice that these three aspects are three completely different
issues, which can be seen in exactly the same manner in the case of the death penalty.
Aspects (1), (2), and (3) correspond respectively to the Harm stage, the blame stage,
and the Danger stage. undoubtedly, none of these three aspects should be ignored
and they actually appear in a mutually intertwined manner: the more successful the
preventive measures are, the fewer victims will be produced by tsunami and nuclear-
plant accidents in the future. Those aspects affect each other. likewise, we must con-
sider each of the three stages regarding the death penalty.
5. INITIAl HArM
The arguments thus far provide the basic standpoint that I want to propose con-
cerning the debates on the death penalty. I want to investigate the issue of the death
penalty by sharply distinguishing between these three stages and by simultaneously
considering them all equally. by following this strategy, I will demonstrate that there
are intrinsic uncertainties, and four problems resulting from those uncertainties, in
the system of the death penalty. In so doing I will raise a novel objection to the con-
temporary debate over the death penalty.
roughly speaking, as I have previously mentioned, the death penalty debate
continues to involve the two opposing views of abolitionism and retentionism (or
perhaps, in the case of abolitionist countries, revivalism). It seems that the main argu-
5. In fact, the hardships suffered by those forced to flee to shelters constituted the main problem
resulting from the nuclear power plants accident. In general, radiation exposure is the most well-
known problemarising from nuclear power plant accidents, but it is not always the case. In particular
in the case of the Fukushima nuclear power plant accident in japan, the overestimation of the danger
of radiation exposure, and evacuation activities resulting from that overestimation, caused the
biggest and the most serious problems including many of the deaths. we always have to take the risk-
tradeoff into account. radiation exposure is just one risk, and is not the only risk to be considered.
see Ichinose (2016).
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE64
ments to support or justify each of the two traditional views (which I have briefly de-
scribed in section 2 above) have already been exhausted. what matters in this context
is whether the death penalty can be justified, and then whether—if it is justifiable—it
should be justified in terms of retributivism or utilitarianism. That is the standard
way of the debate on the death penalty. For example, when the retributive standpoint
is used to justify the death penalty, the notion of proportionality as an element of
fairness or social justice might be relevant, apart from the issue of whether propor-
tionality should be measured cardinally or ordinally (see von Hirsch 1993, pp. 6-19).
In other words, if one person has killed another, then that person too ought to be
killed—that is, executed—in order to achieve fairness. However, as other scholars
such as Tonry (1994) have argued, it is rather problematic to apply the notion of pro-
portionality to the practice of punishment because it seems that there is no objective
measure of offence, culpability, or responsibility. rather, the notion of parsimony6 is
often mentioned in these contexts as a more practical and fairer principle than the
notion of proportionality.
However, according to my argument above, such debates are inadequate if they
are simply applied to the case of the death penalty. Proportionality between which
two things is being discussed? Most likely, what is considered here is the proportion-
ality between harm by homicide (where the measured value of offence might be the
maximum) and harm by execution. However, I want to reconfirm the essential point.
what specifically is the harm of homicide? whom are we talking about when we
discuss the harm of homicide? As I previously argued, citing epicurus and his HTD,
there is a metaphysical doubt about whether we should regard death as harmful. If
a person simply disappears when he or she dies and death is completely harmless as
HTD claims, then it seems that the retributive justification for the death penalty in
terms of proportionality must be nonsense, for nothing at all happens that should
trigger the process of crime and punishment. of course, following HTD, the exe-
cution should be similarly regarded as nonsensical. However, if that is the case, the
entire institutional procedure, from the perpetrator’s arrest to his or her execution,
must be considered a tremendous waste of time, labour, and money.
6. The notion of parsimony was newly offered to avoid a fundamental drawback of the standard
retributive system, whether based on cardinal or ordinal proportionality: the standard system tends
to inflict excessive, cruel punishment, as its criterion of measuring wrongness is not exempt from be-
ing arbitrary. In contrast, the newly offered system could hold inflicted punishment ‘as minimally as
possible, consistent with the vague limits of cardinal desert’ (walen 2015) in terms of introducing an
idea of parsimony. The notion of parsimony could make the retributive system of punishment more
reasonable and humane while retaining the idea of retribution.
Volume 5, Issue 1
The Death Penalty Debate 65
some may think that these kinds of arguments are merely empty philosophi-
cal abstractions. That may be. However, it is not the case that there is nothing plau-
sible to be considered in these arguments. consider the issue of euthanasia. why
do people sometimes wish to be euthanised? It is because people can be relieved of a
painful situation by dying. That is to say, people wishing to be euthanised take death
to be painless, i.e. harmless, in the same manner as HTD. This idea embedded in the
case of euthanasia is so understandable that the issue of euthanasia is one of the most
popular topics in ethics; however, if so, epicurus’s HTD should not be taken as non-
sensical, for HTD holds in the same way as the idea embedded in the case of eutha-
nasia that when we die, we have neither pain nor any other feeling. what I intend to
highlight here is that we must be acutely aware that there is a fundamental problem
concerning the notion of harm by homicide, if we want to be philosophically sincere
and consistent7.
In other words, I assert that the contemporary debate over the death penalty
tends to lack proper consideration for the Harm stage in which victims themselves
essentially matter, although that stage must be the very starting point of all issues.
we must understand this pivotal role of the Harm stage before intelligently discuss-
ing the death penalty. of course, in practice, we can discuss the death penalty in a
significant and refined manner without investigating the Harm stage. For example,
according to Goldman, one of the plausible positions regarding the justification for
punishment in general is a position that combines both retributivism and utilitarian-
ism. Mentioning john rawls and H. l. A. Hart, Goldman writes (1995, p. 31):
Some philosophers have thought that objections to these two theories of punishment
could be overcome by making both retributive and utilitarian criteria necessary for
the justification of punishment. Utilitarian criteria could be used to justify the insti-
tution, and retributive to justify specific acts within it.
Goldman argues, however, that this mixed position could result in a paradox
7. roger crisp kindly pointed out that it is worth considering an institutional justification
according to which punishment wouldn’t have to be tailored to a particular case. In this view, it is
sufficient that death is generally bad for both victims and perpetrators. I do not deny the practical
persuasiveness of this view. However, from a more philosophical point of view, we should propose
a question ‘how can we know that death is generally bad for victims of homicide?’ Following HTD,
which is certainly one possible philosophical view, death is not bad at all, regardless of whether we
talk about general issues or particular cases, as an agent to whom something is bad or not disappears
by dying by definition. of course, as long as we exclusively focus upon harm which the bereaved
family or the society in general suffer, the institutional justification could make good sense, although
in that case the issue of direct victims killed would remain untouched.
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE66
regarding how severe the punishment to be imposed on the guilty should be, even
though this position avoids punishing the innocent (ibid., p.36):
While the mixed theory can avoid punishment of the innocent, it is doubtful that it
can avoid excessive punishment of the guilty if it is to have sufficient effect to make
the social cost worthwhile.
This argument is useful in providing a moral and legal warning to society not to
punish offenders more severely than they deserve, even if that punishment is more
effective in deterring future crimes. I frankly admit that Goldman’s suggestion goes
to the essence of the concept of justice. However, I must also say that if his argument
is applied to the death penalty, then it has not yet touched the fundamental question
that forms the basis of the whole issue: whose harm should we discuss? Is it appropri-
ate not to discuss the Harm stage? Alternatively, I am raising the following question:
who is the victim of homicide? At the very least, I think we should admit that this
very question is the crucial one constituting the first problem on the death penalty,
the uncertainty of Harm.
6. FeelING oF beING vIcTIMIseD
Next, I will examine another kind of uncertainty that is specific to the blame
stage; the idea of retribution matters here. As far as the japanese context for the death
penalty is concerned, according to statistical surveys of public opinion, people tend
to strongly support the death penalty in the case of particularly violent homicides
in which they are probably feeling particularly victimised. If the death penalty were
abolished, it seems that the abolition would be extremely unfair to victims of homi-
cide, as the rights of victims (i.e. rights of life, liberty, property, and so on) would be
denied by being killed, whereas those of perpetrators would be excessively protected.
obviously, the notion of retributive proportionality or equilibrium is the basis for
this argument. To put it another way, this logic of retribution aims at justifying the
death penalty in terms of its achieving equilibrium between the violated rights of
victims and the deprived rights of perpetrators in the name of punishment. Is this
logic perfectly acceptable? emotionally speaking, I want to say yes. we japanese
might even say that perpetrators should gallantly and bravely kill themselves to take
responsibility for their actions, as we have a history of the samurai who were expect-
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ed to conduct hara-kiri when they did something shameful. However, theoretically
speaking, we cannot accept this logic immediately, because there are too many doubt-
ful points. Those doubts as a whole constitute the second problem concerning the
death penalty.
First, we must ask, as well as in the previous section, on the issue of feeling vic-
timised, whom are we discussing? whose feelings and whose rights matter? Direct
victims in the case of homicide do not exist by definition. Then a question arises:
why can substitutes (prosecutors and others) or the bereaved family ask for the death
penalty based on their feelings rather than the direct victim’s feeling? How are they
qualified to ask for such a stringent punishment when they were not the ones killed?
The crucial point to be noted here is that the bereaved family is not identical with
the direct victim. second, even if it is admitted that the notion of the victim’s emo-
tional harm are relevant to sentencing (and at least in the sense of emotional harm
the bereaved family’s suffering I would agree that this makes them certainly the prin-
cipal victims even if not the direct victim), it must be asked: can we justify an institu-
tion based on a feeling? This question is a part of the traditional debate concerning
the moral sense theory. we have repeatedly asked whether social institutions can be
based on moral sense or human feeling, when such sense or feeling cannot help but
be arbitrary because those, after all, are subjective. The question is still unanswered.
Third, if the feelings of being victimised justify the death penalty, then could an ac-
cidental killing or involuntary manslaughter be included in crimes that deserve the
death penalty? Actually, the feelings of the bereaved family in the case of accidental
killing could be qualitatively the same as in the case of voluntary homicide. However,
even countries which adopt the death penalty do not usually prescribe that execution
is warranted for accidental killing. Fourth, I wonder whether the bereaved family who
feel victimised always desire the execution of the killer. It could be that they consider
resuming their daily lives more important than advocating the execution of the mur-
derer who killed their family member. As a matter of practical fact, executions of
perpetrators need have nothing to do with supporting bereaved families. Fifth, if we
accept the logic in which the death penalty is justified by the bereaved family’s feeling
of being victimised, how should we deal with cases where the person who was killed
was alone in the world, with no family? If there is no bereaved family, then no one
feels victimised. Is the death penalty unwarranted in this case? In any case, as these
questions suggest, we should be aware that retributive justification based upon the
feeling of being victimised is not as acceptable as we initially expected. once again,
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MASAKI ICHINOSE68
there is uncertainty here. uncertainty of blame leads to the second problem concern-
ing the death penalty.
7. vIolATIoN AND ForFeITure
of course, the retributive justification for the death penalty does not have to
depend upon the feeling of being victimised alone, even if the primitive basis for it
might lie in human emotion. The theoretical terminology of human rights them-
selves (rather than emotional feeling based on the notion of rights) could be used as
justification: if a person violates another’s rights (to property, freedom, a healthy life,
etc.), then that person must forfeit his or her own rights in proportion to the violated
rights. This can be regarded as a formulation of the system of punishment estab-
lished in the modern era that is theoretically based upon the social contract theory.
The next remark of Goldman confirms this point (1995, p.33):
If we are asked which rights are forfeited in violating the rights of others, it is plausi-
ble to answer just those rights that one violates (or an equivalent set). One continues
to enjoy rights only as long as one respects those rights in others: violation constitutes
forfeiture . . . Since deprivation of those particular rights violated is often impracti-
cable, we are justified in depriving a wrongdoer of some equivalent set, or in inflict-
ing harm equivalent to that which would be suffered in losing those same rights.
However, the situation is not so simple, particularly in connection with the
death penalty. In order to clarify this point, we have to reflect, albeit briefly, on how
the concept of human rights has been historically established. I will trace the origin
of the concept of human rights by referring to Fagan’s overall explanation. According
to Fagan (2016, section 2):
Human rights rest upon moral universalism and the belief in the existence of a truly
universal moral community comprising all human beings . . . The origins of moral
universalism within Europe are typically associated with the writings of Aristotle
and the Stoics.
Followed by the remark:
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The Death Penalty Debate 69
Aristotle unambiguously expounds an argument in support of the existence of a
natural moral order. This natural order ought to provide the basis for all truly ratio-
nal systems of justice . . . The Stoics thereby posited the existence of a universal moral
community effected through our shared relationship with god. The belief in the ex-
istence of a universal moral community was maintained in Europe by Christianity
over the ensuing centuries.
This classical idea was linked during the 17th and 18th centuries to the concept
of ‘natural law’ including the notion of ‘natural rights’ that each human being pos-
sesses independently of society or policy. ‘The quintessential exponent of this posi-
tion was john locke . . . locke argued that natural rights flowed from natural law.
Natural law originated from God’ (ibid.). Fagan continues (ibid.):
Analyses of the historical predecessors of the contemporary theory of human rights
typically accord a high degree of importance to Locke’s contribution. Certainly,
Locke provided the precedent of establishing legitimate political authority upon a
rights foundation. This is an undeniably essential component of human rights.
Although, of course, we should take post-lockean improvement including
Kantian ideas into account to fully understand contemporary concepts of human
rights, we cannot deny that locke’s philosophy ought to be considered first.
As is well known, locke’s argument focuses on property rights. He put forth
the idea that property rights were based on our labour. Thus, his theory is called ‘the
labour theory of property rights’. let me quote the famous passage I have in mind
(locke 1960, second Treatise, section 27):
Though the Earth, and all inferior Creatures be common to all Men, yet every Man
has a Property in his own Person. This no Body has any Right to but himself. The
Labour of his Body, and the Works of his Hands, we may say, are properly his.
This idea could cover any kind of human rights such as those for living a healthy
life, liberty, and property, because human rights are supposed to be owned by us. For
example, H. l.A. Hart once argued that legal rights are nothing but legal powers to
require others to meet correlative obligations, and then pointed out that; ‘we also
speak of the person who has the correlative right as possessing it or even owning it’
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MASAKI ICHINOSE70
(Hart 1982, p.185). If this is the case, we can make property rights representative of all
human rights.
However, if we follow locke’s theory (and many countries, including japan,
still do), then it logically follows that what we cannot gain by our labour by defini-
tion cannot be objects of human rights. How does locke’s idea apply to our life itself
(rather than simply living a healthy life)? Are we able to acquire our life itself by our
labour? No, we cannot. we can realise a healthy life by making an effort to be moder-
ate, but we cannot create our lives. we are creatures or animals; therefore, our lives
are not something that we ourselves made by our labour. locke uses the concept of
power (as Hart does) when he discusses various aspects of property rights. Among
those, we should pay particular attention to the following (locke 1960, second
Treatise, section 23):
For a Man, not having the Power of his own life, cannot, by Compact, or his own
Consent, enslave himself to any one, nor put himself under the Absolute, Arbitrary
Power of another, to take away his Life, when he pleases.
locke also writes (1960, section 24):
No Man can, by agreement, pass over to another that which he hath not in himself,
a Power over his own life.
obviously, locke assumes that we have no property rights over our own lives or
bodies themselves, or more precisely, no property rights in controlling and destroy-
ing our own lives as a whole; therefore, we cannot alienate those rights to others. we
cannot alienate or forfeit what we do not have. If this is the case and we presuppose
the formulation of the system of punishment introduced above in terms of viola-
tion and forfeiture, what would result? The answer is clear. our lives themselves are
conceptually beyond the terminology of human rights, and thus, if the death penalty
is defined as a punishment requiring the forfeiture of the perpetrator’s right to life,
the death penalty should be regarded as conceptually contradictory or impossible.
we cannot lose tails, as we do not have tails. likewise, we cannot own our lives (i.e.
we have no property rights in our life itself ), so we cannot lose our lives, at least in
such a sense as forfeiture of human rights. This is the third route to an ‘impossibilist’
view of the death penalty. This argument depends heavily on locke’s original theory.
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Nevertheless, as long as we have to consider locke’s classical view seriously in order
to discuss the relation between punishment and human rights, we must be aware
that we could be involved in theoretical uncertainty in justifying the death penalty
through the notion of human rights in a retributivist flavour, as the argument thus far
suggests. This is the very puzzle that I want to propose as the third problem concern-
ing the death penalty debates.
Moreover, we must acknowledge that retributive ideas in the blame stage usually
include a kind of evaluation of the psychological state of the agent’s behaviour at the
time of the crime as a matter of legal fact. In other words, rationality, freedom, or
mens rea are usually needed for agents to be judged guilty. However, from a strict-
ly philosophical perspective, we should say that it is far from easy in principle to
confirm those states in the past. Indeed, this psychological trend seems to cause con-
troversy in court proceedings, as seen, for example, in the American context known
as ‘battered-woman syndrome’. If a woman who has been routinely battered by her
partner suddenly fights back and kills her partner, American courts often find her
not guilty. People wonder whether such an evaluation concerning battered women
could be correctly made without arbitrariness. Additionally, philosophical debates
on free will and the development of the brain sciences must be considered. some
philosophers assert that we have no free will because our personality and actions are
intrinsically governed by external factors, such as our environments or biological
conditions, which are definitely beyond our control. This philosophical standpoint
is often called ‘hard incompatibilism’ (see strawson 2008). In this respect, my analogy
to a natural disaster could be seen as appropriate, as our actions might be taken to
be just natural phenomena at the end of the day.8 Furthermore, brain sciences often
provide shocking data to suggest that our will may be controlled by brain phenomena
occurring prior to our consciousness, as shown by benjamin libet. In view of such
contemporary arguments, we have little choice but to say that we cannot be perfectly
certain whether a given perpetrator who committed homicide is truly guilty, as long
as we adopt the present standard for judging the psychological states of offenders in
court. To sum up, the third problem for the death penalty is the difficulty in knowing
8. Additionally, my analogy with natural disasters, particularly the case of the 2011 quake, could
be re-confirmed to be appropriate in the sense of presenting a similar kind of uncertainty to the case
of the death penalty. The danger of constant exposure to low doses of radiation for long periods in-
volves some uncertainty, as far as we now know. Fortunately, however, the dose of radiation to which
the people of Fukushima were exposed as a result of the 2011 quake, internally and externally, was
low enough for us to be certain, based upon past epidemiological research, that no health problems
will arise in the future. regarding radiation exposure, everything depends upon the level of dose.
The smaller the dose, the less dangerous it is.
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE72
whether someone has property in their life itself as well as uncertainty about the
mental state of the accused, this is the uncertainty of rights violation.
8. THe DeTerreNT eFFecT
Finally, I will examine some problems in the Danger stage. what matters in this
context is the utilitarian justification for the death penalty; I will focus on what is
called the ‘deterrent effect’. Firstly, I would like to say that the death penalty undoubt-
edly has some deterrent effect. This is obvious if we imagine a society where violators
of any laws, including minor infractions such as a parking ticket or public urination,
must be sentenced to death. I believe that the number of all crimes would dramati-
cally reduce in that society, although it would constitute a horrible dystopia. The
argument for the deterrent effect of the death penalty probably arises from the same
line of ‘common sense’ thinking. For example, Pojman says, ‘there is some non-statis-
tical evidence based on common sense that gives credence to the hypothesis that the
threat of the death penalty deters and that it does so better than long prison sentences’
(Pojman 1998, pp. 38-39). specifically, this deterrent effect presupposes the utility cal-
culus that a human being conducts, whether consciously or unconsciously, in terms
of ‘weighing the subjective severity of perceived censure and the subjective probabil-
ity of perceived censure against the magnitude of the desire to commit the offence
and the subjective probability of fulfilling this desire by offending’ (beyleveld 1979, p.
219). Therefore, if we presuppose the basic similarity of human conditions, it may be
plausible to state the following about the deterrent effect of punishment: ‘this can be
known a priori on the basis of an analysis of human action’ (ibid., p. 215). However, in
fact, the death penalty in many countries is restricted to especially heinous crimes,
such as consecutive homicides (although some countries apply the death penalty to a
wider range of crimes), which suggests that we must conduct empirical studies, case
by case, if we want to confirm the deterrent effect of the death penalty. Therefore, the
question to be asked regarding the deterrent effect is not whether the death penalty
is actually effective, but rather how effective it is in restricted categories of crimes.
what matters is the degree.
There are many statistical surveys concerning this issue. In particular, an eco-
nomic investigation by ehrlich is often mentioned as a typical example. After exam-
ining detailed statistical data and taking into account various factors, such as race,
heredity, education, and cultural patterns, ehrlich suggests (1975, p. 414):
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The Death Penalty Debate 73
An additional execution per year over the period in question [i.e., 1935-1969] may
have resulted, on average, in 7 or 8 fewer murders.
of course, this estimate includes too many factors and presumptions to be per-
fectly correct. ehrlich himself is aware of this and thus says (ibid.):
It should be emphasized that the expected tradeoffs computed in the preceding il-
lustration mainly serve a methodological purpose since their validity is conditional
upon that of the entire set of assumptions underlying the econometric investigation
… however … the tradeoffs between executions and murders implied by these elastici-
ties are not negligible, especially when evaluated at relatively low levels of execu-
tions and relatively high level[s] of murder.
ehrlich’s study drew considerable criticism, most of which pointed out deficien-
cies in his statistical methodology. Therefore, at this moment, we should say that we
are able to infer nothing definite from ehrlich’s study, although we must value the
study as pioneering work.
van den Haag proposes an interesting argument based upon uncertainty spe-
cific to the deterrent effect of the death penalty. He assumes two cases, namely, case
(1), in which the death penalty exists, and case (2), in which the death penalty does not
exist. In each case there is risk or uncertainty. on the one hand, in case (1), if there is
no deterrent effect, the life of a murderer is lost in vain, whereas if there is a deterrent
effect, the lives of some murderers and innocent victims will be saved in the future.
on the other hand, in case (2), if there is no deterrent effect, the life of a convicted
murderer is saved, whereas if there is a deterrent effect, the lives of some innocent
victims will be lost in the future (van den Haag 1995, pp. 133-134). conway and Pojman
explain this argument using the following table, ‘The best bet Argument’, which I
have modified slightly, having DP stand for the death penalty, and De the deterrent
effect:
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE74
THe wAGer
DE works DE does not work
We bet DP works save: murderers and innocent
victims in the
future
lose: convicted murderer
save: nothing affected
lose: convicted murderer
We bet DP does
not work
save: convicted murderer
lose: innocent victims in the
future
save: convicted murderer
lose: nothing affected
Following this table, conway assumes (after van den Haag’s suggestion that the
life of a convicted murderer is not valued more highly than that of the unknown
victims) numerical values about each case (each numerical number stands for not a
number of people but a hypothetical value for a person to be saved or killed) :
a murderer saved +5
a murderer executed -5
an innocent saved +10
an innocent murdered -10
Moreover, he assumes that for each execution, only two innocent lives are spared
(i.e. he assumes the deterrent effect to be almost the minimum). Then, consequently,
executing convicted murderers turns out to be a good bet (conway 1995, pp. 265-266;
Pojman 1998, pp. 40-41).
9. NeGATIve cAusATIoN AND wHere To GIve PrIorITY
van den Haag’s ‘best bet Argument’ sounds quite interesting. However, conway
has already proposed a fundamental challenge to this argument: it mistakenly regards
the actual death of convicted murderers as being on a par with the possible death of
innocent victims in the future (conway 1995, pp. 269-270). This is confusing or pos-
sibly a rhetorical sleight of hand. I think that conway’s reaction to van den Haag’s
argument is a reasonable one.
Volume 5, Issue 1
The Death Penalty Debate 75
As I approach my conclusion, I will propose two problems with van den Haag’s
argument. First, I want to acknowledge that any arguments, including van den Haag’s,
supporting the death penalty in terms of its deterrent effect seem to presuppose a
causal relationship between the existence of the death penalty and people not killing
others. For example, Pojman writes, ‘the repeated announcement and regular exercise
of capital punishment may have deep causal influence’ (1998, p. 48). However, episte-
mologically speaking, that presupposition is extremely hard to confirm, because the
effect of this causal relationship is not a positive, but rather a negative event, which
is the event of not killing others. This has something to do with the philosophical
problem of how to understand negative properties. by negative properties we mean
that, for example, my room is not full of seawater; my room does not consist of paper;
my room is not melting us, etc. such descriptions by negative properties can be made
almost endlessly. In other words, one identical event described by a positive property
(e.g., this room is well lit) can be re-described in infinite ways in terms of negative
properties. Take the example that I am now at my computer in Tokyo, writing a paper.
This event can also be described as ‘I am not eating’, ‘I am not sleeping’, ‘I am not
killing others’ (!), etc. The positive event, ‘I am writing a paper now’, can be under-
stood through a causal relationship. The event was most likely caused by my inten-
tion to do so, which was caused by my sense of duty as a professor, etc. How, then,
could we understand the negative description of my action, ‘I am not killing others’?
was this caused by the existence of the death penalty in japan?
Perhaps I was completely unaware of the existence of the death penalty in japan
when I wrote a paper without killing others. could the death penalty be its cause?
could the negative event ‘I am not killing others’ be an effect of the death penalty? It
is hard to say so.
This problem is the same as the problem of ‘causation by absence’ or ‘omission-
involving causation’. Generally, causation by absence is usually examined in the
form of answering a question about whether nothingness can cause something. For
example, David lewis discusses a question about how a void (understood as being
entirely empty or nothing at all, differing from a vacuum) is regarded as a cause of
something (lewis 2004). He says, ‘If you were cast into a void, it would cause you to
die in just a few minutes. It would suck the air from your lungs. It would boil your
blood. It would drain the warmth from your body. And it would inflate enclosures
in your body until they burst’ (ibid., p.277). However, the problem is that the void is
nothing. ‘when the void sucks away the air, it does not exert an attractive force on
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MASAKI ICHINOSE76
the air’ (ibid.). Furthermore, another, perhaps harder problem would arise. we can
say, ‘If I defended you from being cast into a void, you would not die’. Namely, my
omission to defend you would cause you to die. However, should only my omission
matter? what of your brother’s omission to defend you? or the Prime Minister of the
uK’s omission to defend you? Are not all of those qualified to be the cause of your
death, as least as long as we adopt a common-sense counterfactual analysis of causa-
tion? As this argument suggests, in the context of the current debate on this problem,
the most troublesome phase is that ‘too many’ absences can be supposed to cause a
particular effect. I quote Menzies, who says (2004, p.145):
I am writing this essay at my computer. If, however, there were nerve gas in the air,
or I were attacked with flamethrowers, or struck by a meteor shower, I would not
be writing the essay. But it is counterintuitive to say that the absence of nerve gas,
flamethrower attack, and meteor strike are causes of my writing the essay.
This example takes the issue of absence as a cause, but simultaneously his
example refers to the case of effect as absence (not writing the essay). As this shows,
the current debate on the problem of causation by absence could extend to the case
of effect as absence. In any case, what matters is a possibility that ‘too many’ absences
can cause something, and something can cause ‘too many’ absences (Menzies calls this
problem ‘the problem of profligate causation’ (ibid., pp.142-145). Then the deterrent
effect of the death penalty is definitely classified as a case of absence as effect rather
than cause. In other words, the absence of homicide (as effect) matters, whereas in
this case execution (as cause) is presupposed to exist. It seems that the current debate
on causation by absence is highly likely to contribute to discussing the problem of the
deterrent effect.
of course, someone may counter my argument by saying that what matters in
this context is a statistical correlation between the number of executions and the
number of homicides, which could be confirmed in an empirical way. I admit that the
statistical correlation plays a crucial role here, even though we must simultaneously
acknowledge that what is called ‘randomized controlled trial’, the most reliable, sta-
tistical methodology to confirm causal relations, is unfeasible due to the nature of the
problem. Actually, this kind of correlation is too rough to predict the causal relation-
ship between those, although the causation really matters. causes of a reduction or
increase in the number of homicides can be interpreted or estimated in various ways,
Volume 5, Issue 1
The Death Penalty Debate 77
considering confounding factors, such as education, economic situation, urban plan-
ning, and so on. Therefore, in principle, there always remains the possibility that the
apparent correlation between the death penalty and the reduction of homicides is
merely accidental. For example, there may be another, common cause, that brings
about both people’s tendency to support the death penalty and the reduction of ho-
micides9. we should recognise that there is intrinsic uncertainty here. These diffi-
culties concerning causal relations give rise to a fourth problem related to the death
penalty debates – the uncertainty of causal consequences.
Incidentally, let me now return to my distinction of the three stages regarding
the death penalty. obviously, the issue of the deterrent effect belongs primarily to the
Danger stage. Yet it is vital to consider the Harm stage. How can the deterrent effect
affect the Harm stage? I must say that the retentionist’s argument, in terms of the
deterrent effect of the death penalty, completely dismisses this essential point. we
need only recall the analogy of the 2011 quake in japan. ‘retentionism’ based upon
the deterrent effect corresponds to aspect (3), where the improvement of the preven-
tive system matters. This is important, of course, but cannot be a priority. Priority lies
in the issues of how to deal with the actual harm that the victims have already suf-
fered (specifically referring to the bereaved family or others in the case of homicide
and the death penalty). without consideration of how to cope with the harm, even if
the theory seriously considers the innocent victims in the future, the retentionists’
theory can hardly be persuasive.
It is true that the retentionists’ theory based on the deterrent effect appropriate-
ly considers the person harmed in the process of punishment. For example, walker
considers such a phase in the process of punishment as one of the possible objections
against retentionism based on the deterrent effect by saying: ‘if the benefit excludes
the person harmed this too is nowadays regarded by many people as morally unac-
ceptable’ (walker 1980, p. 65). However, as the context clearly shows, by ‘the person
harmed’ he means the person punished. He does not mention the initial harm suf-
fered by victims. This problem is concerned with my previous claim; that is, we have
to consider the ‘whom-question’ when we discuss the justification of punishment.
whom are we discussing? whose benefit do we consider? In the face of victims
before our eyes, can we emphasise only the improvement of preventive systems for
9. on negative causation and the possibility of common cause, see Ichinose (2013). In particular,
my argument on negative causation concerning the death penalty rests on my argument of Ichinose
(2013).
Journal of Practical Ethics
MASAKI ICHINOSE78
the future? evidently, actual victims are the first to be helped, although obviously it
is not at all bad to simultaneously consider the preventive system in the future. It is
necessary for us to respect basic human rights and the human dignity of perpetrators
and innocent people in the future; however, that respect must be in conjunction with
our first taking care of actual victims. we ought not to get our priorities wrong.
10. ProsPecTs
I have indicated that the debates on the death penalty are inevitably surrounded
by four problems over specific kinds of uncertainties: uncertainty concerning the
victim of homicide, uncertainty in justifying the death penalty from the feeling of
being victimised, uncertainty in justifying the death penalty on the basis of human
rights, and uncertainty over negative causation. In the course of examining these
problems, I have proposed the option of developing an ‘impossibilist’ position about
the death penalty, which I am convinced, deserves further investigation. However,
being surrounded by theoretical problems and uncertainties might be more or less
true of any social institution. My aim is only to suggest how the death penalty should
be understood as involving uncertainties from a philosophical perspective. Most
likely, if there is something practical that I can suggest based on my argument, then
what we might call a ‘Harm-centred system’ may be introduced as a relatively prom-
ising option instead of, or in tandem with, the death penalty. what I mean by this is a
system in which we establish as a priority redressing actual harm with regard to legal
justice, where ‘actual harm’ only implies what the bereaved family suffer from, as the
direct victims have already disappeared in the case of homicide. In other words, I
think that something akin to the maximalist approach to restorative justice10 or some
hybrid of the traditional justice system and the restorative justice system should be
seriously considered, although we cannot expect perfect solutions exempt from all of
10. According to bazemore and walgrave, ‘restorative justice is every action that is primarily
oriented towards doing justice by repairing the harm that has been caused by a crime (bazemore
and walgrave 1999 (2), p.48). restorative justice, that is to say, is a justice system that mainly aims at
restoring or repairing the harm of offences rather than punishing offenders as the retributive jus-
tice system does. Initially, restorative justice has been carried out by holding ‘a face-to-face meeting
between the parties with a stake in the particular offense’ (ibid.) like victim, offenders, or victim-
ised communities. However, this type of justice system works only in a complementary way to the
traditional system of retributive justice. Then, the maximalist approach to restorative justice was
proposed, which seeks to develop ‘restorative justice as a fully-fledged alternative’(bazemore and
walgrave 1999 (1). Introduction. P.8) to retributive justice. This approach ‘will need to include the use
of coercion and a formalization of both procedures and the relationship between communities and
society’ (ibid., p.9.)
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The Death Penalty Debate 79
the above four problems. It is certainly worth considering whether some element of
restorative justice can play a significant role in the best theory of punishment.
In any case, my argument is at most a philosophical attempt to address problems.
How to apply it to the practice of the legal system is a question to be tackled in a
future project.
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bazemore, G. and walgrave, l. 1999 (1). ‘Introduction: restorative justice and the International
juvenile justice crisis’. In Restorative Juvenile Justice: Repairing the Harm of Youth Crime, eds. G. bazemore
and l. walgrave, criminal justice Press, 1-13.
———. 1999 (2). ‘restorative juvenile justice: In search of Fundamentals and an outline for
system reform’. In Restorative Juvenile Justice: Repairing the Harm of Youth Crime, eds. G. bazemore and
l. walgrave, criminal justice Press, 45-74.
beyleveld, D. 1979. ‘Identifying, explaining and Predicting Deterrence’. British Journal of
Criminology 19:3, 205–224.
calvert, b. 1993. ‘locke on Punishment and the Death Penalty’. Philosophy 68:264,, 211–229.
collins, j., N. Hall, and l. A. Paul. 2004. causation and counterfactuals. MIT
Press.
conway, D. A. 1995 (originally 1974). ‘capital Punishment and Deterrence: some considerations
in Dialogue Form’. In Punishment: A Philosophy and Public Affairs Reader, eds. j. simmons, M. cohen, j.
cohen, and c. r. beitz. Princeton university Press, 261–273.
Diogenes laertius. 1925. Lives of Eminent Philosophers. vol. 2. Trans. r. D. Hicks. loeb classical
library. william Heinemann ltd.
ehrlich, I. 1975. ‘The Deterrent effect of capital Punishment: A Question of life and Death’.
American Economic Review 65:3, 397–417.
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2161-0002. Available from http://www.iep.utm.edu/hum-rts/#H2 [Accessed 12 june 2017]
Fischer, j. M., ed. 1993. The Metaphysics of Death. stanford university Press.
Goldman, A. H. 1995 (originally 1979). ‘The Paradox of Punishment’. In Punishment: A Philosophy
and Public Affairs Reader, eds. j. simmons, M. cohen, j. cohen, and c. r. beitz. Princeton university
Press, 30–46.
Hart, H. l. A. 1982. Essays on Bentham: Jurisprudence and Political Theory. oxford university Press.
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Ichinose, M. 2013. ‘Hybrid Nature of causation’. In T. uehiro, Ethics for the Future of Life:
Proceedings of the 2012 Uehiro-Carnegie-Oxford Ethics Conference, the oxford uehiro center for Practical
ethics, university of oxford, 60-80.
———. 2016. ‘A Philosophical Inquiry into the confusion over the radiation exposure Problem’.
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lewis, D. 2004. ‘void and object’. In j. collins, N. Hall, and l. A. Paul, Causation and
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———. 1975. An Essay concerning Human Understanding, ed. P. H. Nidditch. oxford university
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Menzies, P. 2004. ‘Difference-Making in context’. In j. collins, N. Hall, and l. A. Paul, Causation
and Counterfactuals. MIT Press, 139–180.
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(1) One 5-8 page double spaced essay. It is worth 40 points
This essay will be 5-8 pages double spaced, times new roman, and can be on any of the material we’ve covered leading up to the date it is due. You can also opt to chat with me privately about doing an “independent study” essay on a topic of your choosing which isn’t discussed in class. The essay, of course, will contain an argument for a conclusion.
The essay should be written in a laid back style of the sort that you might find in an op-ed for a media outlet or a blog, and should eschew jargon except where clearly defined. You’ll be graded on three criteria:
Clarity – Can an average reader — say, of 8th grade education — understand what you’re arguing? Can they see your reasons for concluding the thing(s) you do?
Enjoyability – Make it a little fun for your audience! Do you grip their attention at the beginning and maintain that hold throughout the work? Let the reader see some of your personality inflected in your words, emphases, and sentence transitions. Try to illustrate points by using examples which are entertaining.
Insight – Does your essay strike the reader with some intrigue? Will he or she see an issue in a new light? Will he take pause to consider something you’ve said which captivated his imagination? Do you make the reader question a tacit assumption he wasn’t previously aware of?
I can’t provide much more specificity for satisfying these criteria, unfortunately, as it is ultimately a matter of judgment, like a chef who knows — from years of practice — when a chicken is cooked just right. But you can of course disagree with my assessment of your essay on any of the criteria. We will work it out.
The essay assignment is to provide you with practice for doing philosophically argued public writing later on in your life. Many of you probably won’t pursue academia, but you will all be members of communities; businesses, churches, clubs, associations, etc. At the very least, you’re all participatory agents in some nation or another. As such, to learn how to write for a public venue is to learn a skill for public speaking which allows you to vocalize your concerns and desires in your community. Also, on a more personal note, learning to write well in this way enables you to send thoughtful letters to people close to you in life. It may seem like a strange or foreign thing right now, but writing letters can become special later in life when you want to retain substantive relationships with people who live far away.