On Crime And Punishment By Cesare Beccaria

777 Words2 Pages

The Death Penalty Laws date as far back as the fourteenth century. The initial purpose of the death penalty was to cause death to those who committed all crimes and was punishable by crucifixion, drowning, beaten to death, burned alive, and impalement. America’s use of the death penalty was influence by Britain. When European settlers came to the new world, they brought the practice of capital punishment. During the Colonial Times, it was Cesare Beccaria’s 1767 essay, On Crimes and Punishment, which had an especially strong impact throughout the world. The essay revealed his views on the death penalty. He felt that there was no justification for the state’s taking of a life. The Death Penalty should not be allowed because there is not way to remedy the prisoners’ occasional mistake, the application of the death penalty tends to be arbitrary and capricious; for similar crimes, some are sentenced to death while others receive a less severe sentence, and that there is racial and economic discrimination in application of the death penalty. …show more content…

Humans are the law and humans are entitled to a few mistakes. Problem is, what happens when the mistake is discovered after the person has been executed for a crime he or she did not commit? The damage is done at this point and there is no way to turn the mistake around. If the executed person has a family, there is no way to repair the damage that was done to family. Numerous people who are on death row tend to tell the truths before they are executed. When the truth reveals that they actually committed the crime as opposed to the person that was executed for the crime years ago, it is impossible to remedy the occasional

Open Document