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<title>Phronimon (2005) Vol. 6 No. 2</title>
<link>https://ir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/5417</link>
<description/>
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<dc:date>2026-05-01T18:00:19Z</dc:date>
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<title>Plato's views on capital punishment</title>
<link>https://ir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/5500</link>
<description>Plato's views on capital punishment
Ladikos, Anastasios
Plato’s theory of punishment distinguishes scientifically&#13;
administered measures, which may or may not take the form of&#13;
actual punishment designed to cure a criminal of his offence&#13;
which is a disease of the soul, not something which is an&#13;
inseparable part of the concrete criminal act. He is aversive to&#13;
retributive punishment which is designed merely to make the&#13;
criminal suffer as a kind of primitive compensation for his crime.&#13;
Plato does not commit himself to the view that all forms of&#13;
punishment benefits the criminal as he reasons that only just&#13;
punishment has this effect. Capital punishment in Plato’s&#13;
penology is reserved for the incurable and the bad men&#13;
themselves would seem better candidates for this penalty than&#13;
those who in spite of propensities to vice yet succeed in avoiding&#13;
the greatest judgement. The mere infliction of suffering (timoria)&#13;
makes people worse than they already were; they will not be&#13;
cured or deterred as they will go from bad to worse, ultimately&#13;
become incorrigible and bound to be executed as an example to&#13;
others. Curing or rehabilitating the criminal in practice will mean&#13;
the reshaping of his character to a pattern approved by the&#13;
authorities. The death penalty is imposed for the worst offenders&#13;
but in Plato’s opinion it is not considered to be an extreme&#13;
penalty. This paradox can only be understood when pondered&#13;
through Platonic assumptions about morality, happiness and&#13;
existence after death.
</description>
<dc:date>2005-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>Did the cynics condone theft? Possession and dispossession in the diogenes tradition</title>
<link>https://ir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/5498</link>
<description>Did the cynics condone theft? Possession and dispossession in the diogenes tradition
Bosman, Phlip
In this paper, I explore the evidence in the Diogenes tradition on&#13;
the issue of theft. A line in Diogenes Laertius suggests that the&#13;
Cynic approved of temple theft. However, before that can be&#13;
taken as proof, various other factors need to be taken into&#13;
account: Cynic philosophical principles, their view of the gods,&#13;
and their adherence to begging and voluntary poverty. Finally,&#13;
the Diogenic anecdotes dealing with theft should be considered.&#13;
It appears that the Cynics could have constructed a case for&#13;
legitimising theft, but that they probably neither drew the&#13;
conclusion, nor put it into practice themselves. The claim that&#13;
Diogenes condoned temple theft may have found its way into his&#13;
Life from a hostile source, but it more probably goes back to&#13;
Bion of Borysthenes.
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<dc:date>2005-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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