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Thoughts on the Death Penalty

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(4 Sterne; 1 Bewertungen)

This 1845 publication, written by a prominent reformer of the day, argues against capital punishment from several perspectives, including historical, philosophical and biblical arguments. It is broken into 3 chapters: Expediency, Justice, and Sacred Scriptures (although it has Scripture references peppered throughout). Burleigh frequently references and argues against George B. Cheever, a prominent death penalty advocate of the time.

"If it shall thus be the means of helping on in a humble way the progress of that humane reform whose principles it advocates; and of hastening, however little, the coming of that time, when the penal statutes of a "christian" and "civilized people," shall have ceased to be written in blood, I shall be richly repaid for the time and labor spent upon this task." (Summary by TriciaG and from the preface) (6 hr 22 min)

Chapters

Preface

2:40

Read by Larry Wilson

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 1

20:00

Read by Larry Wilson

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 2

26:13

Read by Mary in Arkansas

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 3

20:46

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 4

25:52

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 5

23:55

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 6

21:35

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 7

34:30

Read by TriciaG

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 8

17:22

Read by TriciaG

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 9

20:53

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 10

38:21

Read by Mary in Arkansas

Ch 1: Expediency, Part 11

29:20

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 2: Justice, Part 1

22:21

Read by Shasta

Ch 2: Justice, Part 2

14:36

Read by dunlapkw

Ch 3: Sacred Scriptures, Part 1

19:47

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 3: Sacred Scriptures, Part 2

23:29

Read by Gillian Hendrie

Ch 3: Sacred Scriptures, Part 3

20:42

Read by Gillian Hendrie