Borbón Diego
Center for Studies on Genetics and Law, Research Group on Biological Sciences and Law, Universidad Externado de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia.
Front Sociol. 2024 May 22;9:1395986. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2024.1395986. eCollection 2024.
This article critically navigates the complex debate surrounding free will and criminal justice, challenging traditional assumptions of moral responsibility and culpability. By exploring hard incompatibilism, which denies free will, I question the ethical justification of punitive sanctions and critically analyze the alternative models such as the public health-quarantine and nonconsensual neurobiological "moral" enhancements. These alternatives, however, introduce practical and ethical concerns. Advocating for a neuro-abolitionist perspective, through the proposition of five initial principles/debates, the article suggests a shift in integrating sociological abolitionism with insights from neuroscience. The discussion extends to the implications of hard incompatibilism and the pursuit of more humane and effective approaches to deviant behavior, ultimately calling for the abolition of punitive models and criminal law itself.
本文审慎地梳理了围绕自由意志与刑事司法的复杂辩论,对道德责任与罪责的传统假设提出了挑战。通过探讨否认自由意志的强硬不相容论,我质疑惩罚性制裁的伦理正当性,并批判性地分析了诸如公共卫生检疫和非自愿神经生物学“道德”增强等替代模式。然而,这些替代方案引发了实际和伦理方面的担忧。通过提出五条初始原则/辩论主张神经废除主义观点,本文建议将社会学废除主义与神经科学见解相结合,实现一种转变。讨论延伸至强硬不相容论的影响以及对越轨行为寻求更人道、有效的方法,最终呼吁废除惩罚性模式和刑法本身。