TY - JOUR ID - 61239 TI - Plato on Punishment Ehsan Poshtmashhadi JO - Philosophy JA - JOP LA - en SN - 2008-1553 AU - Hosseini Beheshti, Seyyed Mohammad Reza AD - Associate Professor of philosophy at University of Tehran Y1 - 2016 PY - 2016 VL - 14 IS - 1 SP - 1 EP - 20 KW - Plato KW - Punishment KW - dialectic KW - criminal KW - Revenge KW - rehabilitation DO - 10.22059/jop.2016.61239 N2 - The concept of punishment is one of the most important concepts of Plato´s philosophy, which is achievable through dialectic, using the ordinary concept of punishment. By denying the basis of revenge view of punishment in his own time, Plato establishes his philosophy of punishment on basis of rehabilitation of the criminal. The criminal, Plato says, is primarily a man who is ignorant of the good and the evil and a sick man who suffers from instability of his rational faculty, i.e. his reason cannot take his anger and his lust under its control. Thus the punishment must make the criminal aware of the true good and the true evil, and like a painful treatment endues him the ability to control his anger and lust. So, logically, there are two possibilities: we must either fortify the superior power, i.e. the reason, or we must debilitate the inferior power i.e. anger and lust. Consequently, the Platonic punishment would be executed in two ways: on is to fortify the reason by means of education; the other is to lower the power of the inferior desires. The first is containing the wide realm of education, while the second includes the wide range of weakness; Therefore, Platonic punishment includes a range, from education to weakness, containing practical exercises, restriction, coercion and even murder. Finally, with categorizing and character recognition of the criminal, Plato determines the rehabilitative method and goal of the punishment.   UR - https://jop.ut.ac.ir/article_61239.html L1 - https://jop.ut.ac.ir/article_61239_0eb4cc35bcd383c3c8d02c066d0e0fb8.pdf ER -