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Crime and Moral Beliefs
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16277 |
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BOOK WORLD
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3 / 1989 |
2,592 Words |
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Carl F.H. Henry Carl F.H. Henry, an evangelical theologian, is the author of
more than thirty books, among them The Uneasy Conscience of
Modern Fundamentalism and the six-volume work God, Revelation,
and Authority. |
Jack Katz's explanation of deviant behavior by recourse to moral and spiritual sentiments, as opposed to materialistic, socioecological, and psychological factors, marks a significant turn in the study of criminology.
For good reason, both academicians and political bureaucrats will find the California sociologist's explorations of criminal deviance disturbing, in view of the conventional practice of explaining the causation of crime in terms of the external factors. The very title of Katz's work, Seductions of Crime, links deviant behavior not with poverty or heredity but with beguilement; and the subtitle, "Moral and Sensual Attractions in Doing Evil," connects crime at once with morality, sensuality, and evil.
Katz faults socioeconomic causal analysis on the grounds that many similarly conditioned persons commit no crimes, or do so only sporadically and that the circumstances of many who do commit crimes do not fall into the projected analytic patterns. Against views that simply attribute crime to such background considerations as heredity, poverty and race, Katz focuses on offenders' feelings and studies closely the criminal's attraction to inner enticements and to a sense of moral transcendence. The volume therefore explores sensual and ethical states of mind to explain criminal conduct. In short, Katz locates a major determinant of deviance in criminal consciousness.
Repeatedly Katz urges us to ask: "What does the criminal suppose that he is doing when he does the crime?" The internal aspects of deviant experience, he insists, are more significant than external considerations. "The dominant political and sociological understanding
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