Crime and Punishment
by Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky
This book is not any easy read; meaning it is not one you would suggest to someone to read for entertainment.
It is one of those thought provoking books about humanity, societal beneficiary, and morality.
And it delves into those issues brilliantly and in depth.
The book does not give a final opinion of which choices were "better", but leaves that entirely up to the reader.
If I had to choose one word as an alternate of the book title, it would be Dilemma.
The basic premise of the book ask the same question in multiple ways ----- is it OK for one (or a few) to have to suffer for the benefit of many?
The book centers mainly around 7 characters, each of which make a life choice that they assume will make life "better" for those around them.
I'll give a short synopsis of 3 of the characters:
On the surface one may already assume a moral judgment.
But as the old saying goes ..... there's another side of the coin.
The cheat is a pawn-broker that pays little for the goods and overcharges the sell of those goods because the cheat desires to donate all their earnings to a monastery which would help to provide needed help to the suffering poor.
The murderer kills the cheat because everyone hates the cheat for being greedy.
The prostitute sells her body and endures the shame because her mother and younger siblings are starving and living in squalor.
The book questions "logic" when applied to morality.
Logically one would choose to save the crate that has 10 apples rather than the crate that has 1 apple.
Apply that same logic to this scenario: A ship sinks in shark infested water and 5 people make it into a small lifeboat. But the weight of the lifeboat can only 4 people or it will sink. Is it moral to throw 1 person out of the lifeboat to save 4?
The book also divides mankind into 2 groups politically and class wise and asks which YOU prefer to be in.
Have you read the book?
What are some of your thoughts on it?
by Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky
This book is not any easy read; meaning it is not one you would suggest to someone to read for entertainment.
It is one of those thought provoking books about humanity, societal beneficiary, and morality.
And it delves into those issues brilliantly and in depth.
The book does not give a final opinion of which choices were "better", but leaves that entirely up to the reader.
If I had to choose one word as an alternate of the book title, it would be Dilemma.
Dilemma --- a difficult choice to be made between two or more equally undesirable alternatives
The basic premise of the book ask the same question in multiple ways ----- is it OK for one (or a few) to have to suffer for the benefit of many?
The book centers mainly around 7 characters, each of which make a life choice that they assume will make life "better" for those around them.
I'll give a short synopsis of 3 of the characters:
a cheat (money wise)
a murderer
a prostitute
On the surface one may already assume a moral judgment.
But as the old saying goes ..... there's another side of the coin.
The cheat is a pawn-broker that pays little for the goods and overcharges the sell of those goods because the cheat desires to donate all their earnings to a monastery which would help to provide needed help to the suffering poor.
The murderer kills the cheat because everyone hates the cheat for being greedy.
The prostitute sells her body and endures the shame because her mother and younger siblings are starving and living in squalor.
The book questions "logic" when applied to morality.
Logically one would choose to save the crate that has 10 apples rather than the crate that has 1 apple.
Apply that same logic to this scenario: A ship sinks in shark infested water and 5 people make it into a small lifeboat. But the weight of the lifeboat can only 4 people or it will sink. Is it moral to throw 1 person out of the lifeboat to save 4?
The book also divides mankind into 2 groups politically and class wise and asks which YOU prefer to be in.
1. The elite that are above the law, ie. make the laws for everyone else to follow. (think King, Emperor, Government)
2. Those that comply to the law made out of fear of repercussion.
Have you read the book?
What are some of your thoughts on it?