Punishment - Punishment is punishment by acts of perpetrators. Then more things are "to impose penalties on those who are to be punished" (Couture, 2014, p. 60). Lex Talionis, retaliated in Latin, pointed out that it was associated with the "visible" maxim in the Bible and later received punishment in exchange for the crime committed by the criminal (Sieter, 2014, p. 26). Sanctions include death penalty, imprisonment, intermediate sanctions (mandatory probation), or standard probation, each related to sanctions.
Retaliation is caused by Latin and is used to reward expiration dates, rewards or punishments. But when talking about revenge, I will discuss about punishment only. The old penalty code "eye for eyes, teeth for teeth" is an example of revenge. Some people think that big events such as tornadoes and earthquakes are cosmic rewards of human pride. Synonyms include compensation, compensation, and compensation.
All criminal penalties have two main objectives. First, because it is just and right, it is punishment for punishment and sin. Retaliation is the opposite, it can be remembered as "eyes for the eyes". The second is to prevent and punish offenders to prevent future crimes. Prevention is positive
Retaliation is also the purpose of punishment. Logically, when a murderer is executed, there is no further killing. The American society seems to support retaliation. Eye for the eyes is a long-standing law. In an article before death, the author says, "When someone gets life, the balance of justice will be disturbed, as long as the equilibrium does not recover, society will yield to violent rule: only the life of the murderer You can restore balance and let it go to society. "Murder is an unbearable crime and it is persuasive to show that being punished on the spot. There are many flaws, mainly moral problems in this ideology. For example, if that country punishes a person, does that country have the right to kill?
Kant believes in the theory of punishment for retaliation. It is a familiar concept of "looking eyes and seeing eyes". He said that punishment must be responsive to sin and that criminals must be punished so that justice and equality can exist, ie, as a justification for the law. Equality in the field of crime and punishment means applying the same pain as the victim (stairs) to the criminal. This may sound harsh and brutal, but it is necessary to remember the relationship between punishment, maxim and world law. For example, if a criminal is stolen, he will endanger his property. His behavior is based on the motivation that if it gets popular it makes everyone dangerous, including his own property. Therefore, the relationship with retaliation theory is based on the belief that if you steal from others, you also steal from yourself.