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The sentence, "During the reign of King Henry VIII of England, as many as 72,000 people are estimated to have been executed in the country" should be removed from this page.
The quote from the chronicle reads, "It appeareth by Cardan (who writeth it upon the report of the bishop of Lexovia), in the geniture of King Edward the Sixth, how Henry the Eighth, executing his laws very severely against such idle persons, I mean great thieves, petty thieves, and rogues, did hang up threescore and twelve thousand of them in his time," which does give the 72k figure, but medieval chronicles are NOT a reliable source of numbers whatsoever.
Chucklehammer (
talk) 21:21, 28 August 2022 (UTC)reply
Done : You can edit as you are autoconfirmed now, but I did it for you. @CLYDEFRANKLIN 23:14, 31 August 2022 (UTC)reply
— Assignment last updated by
User78632 (
talk) 15:33, 10 November 2023 (UTC)reply
Extra comma
in the non-painful execution section there is an extra comma. The line should be Britain banned hanging, drawing and quartering... but is hanging, drawing, and quartering. The comma after drawing shouldn't be there since drawing and quartering is a single punishment
TianHao1225 (
talk) 11:25, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
I've removed the extra comma.
Skycloud86 (
talk) 11:31, 27 October 2023 (UTC)reply
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Support per
WP:COMMONNAME. One argument against this move in previous RMs was that "capital punishment" is supposedly a more scholarly term, but even searching articles on JSTOR (
"capital punishment" vs.
"death penalty") or Google Scholar (
"capital punishment" vs.
"death penalty") gives more results for "death penalty". (This is also the case when filtering by articles since 2000 or 2020.) Death penalty is also the more self-explanatory term/plain language; while I would hope most people know what "capital punishment" means, it's most likely that somewhat fewer do than "death penalty" (and some may confuse "capital" and "corporal").
SilverLocust💬 17:04, 1 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Many of the sources you've listed explain the difference. The first Source listed for me says ..."Death penalty" applies to a prisoner who has been sentenced to die, but has not yet been executed; "capital punishment" refers to his actual execution....Moxy🍁 00:44, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Even when/if distinguishing the two terms as meaning "death sentence" (death penalty) and "enforcement of a death sentence" (capital punishment), I don't see why that makes the latter a more suitable title for an article that covers either topic. Absent a split of death penalty to a separate article, this article would be an appropriate place (under either title) to cover both the enforcement of death sentences and the lack of (immediate) enforcement of death sentences that are officially authorized.
SilverLocust💬 04:34, 16 April 2024 (UTC)reply
@
DirtySocks357(WreckItRalph) response to opposition. There is a logical fallacy to state that something should be done because that is how it has been done such as in the Britannica encyclopedia. Or, if your comment was suggesting that Wikipedia is different that other encyclopedias, then similarly that isn't a logical argument for or against the article name change either. At best, it would be a straw man argument, but since it's non-sequitur I'm not sure it can even be considered that.
eximo (
talk) 00:01, 16 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose for the same reasons as back in 2019. Current title is consistent with other articles, as
Marianna251 showed, and is more versatile generally.
Srnec (
talk) 20:06, 1 April 2024 (UTC)reply
As I noted above, Google Scholar shows the opposite of what Marianna251 said it showed in 2019. (She didn't provide a link there.) There's 300,000 more results for death penalty. Second, it was incorrect to claim
WP:COMMONNAME is irrelevant between the #1 and #2 most common terms. And it's just incorrect to say "death penalty" is presently a POV term, as though
AEDPA were some anti–death penalty law.
SilverLocust💬 21:58, 1 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Support. Wikipedia policy (as expressed, for example, in
WP:JARGON and
WP:MTAU) is to make articles (and their titles) understandable to as broad a readership as possible. The summary of
MTAU says: "Strive to make each part of every article as understandable as possible to the widest audience of readers who are likely to be interested in that material." Although both capital punishment and death penalty are widely understood, the former term seems to be getting less common over time and yielding to the latter term, which is direct, straightforward, and understandable to schoolchildren, which capital punishment may or may not be. The word capital does not commonly mean "resulting in death" except when talking about the death penalty, and so that meaning of the word is archaic except as a technical legal term (although a widely recognized one).
As far as consistency with the titles of subsidiary articles is concerned, if there's a consensus for changing the main article title to "Death penalty", it will not be hard to carry that over to quickly approve the same change in wording of the titles in the related articles.
NightHeron (
talk) 22:47, 1 April 2024 (UTC)reply
it will not be hard to carry that over to quickly approve the same change in wording of the titles in the related articles. I think history shows otherwise. If the other articles should be moved also, this should be a multi-move. People might not like moving
List of methods of capital punishment or all the "Capital punishment in ..." articles.
Srnec (
talk) 00:39, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Opposed ....as per many pervious talk ""Death penalty" applies to a prisoner who has been sentenced to die, but has not yet been executed; "capital punishment" refers to his actual execution." The death penalty is a sentence capital punishment is the execution of that sentence..Banu Bargu (2014).
Starve and Immolate: The Politics of Human Weapons. Columbia University Press. p. 102.
ISBN978-0-231-53811-4.Moxy🍁 00:28, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
That doesn't make sense. A "capital offense" or "capital crime" is one where the death penalty can be sought by the prosecutor and eventually carried out, but in many cases isn't. AFAIK people commonly use the two terms "capital punishment" and "death penalty" interchangeably.
NightHeron (
talk) 01:27, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Many people are sentenced to death but it does not mean that the act of capital punishment is always carried out. Capital punishment refers to the process of carrying out the death sentence......Reichel, Philip L. (2022-12-21). "Death Penalty and Capital Punishment in Comparative Perspective". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Oxford University Press.
doi:
10.1093/acrefore/9780190264079.013.626.
ISBN978-0-19-026407-9. Moxy🍁 01:43, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Support per the well reasoned common name argument. If the move passes, other articles should be renamed to match this one, obviating the consistency argument. Regardless of the exact semantics, surely the article scope also covers cases where a death sentence is issued but stayed/moratorium/commuted etc. (
t ·
c) buidhe 01:54, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
@
Buidhe. I support this argument, the fact that other pages may reference capital punishment vs. the death penalty does not confer a rightness or wrongness to the correct naming of the article. If every link in Wikipedia was incorrect, it shouldn't change the balance of the naming of the article to it's correct name. The ability to change the other articles names does obviate the consistency argument by eviscerating it's foundational premise.
eximo (
talk) 00:08, 16 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose. Solution in search of a problem. Both are commonly used. "Death penalty" tends to be more populist and used in debates about its use. "Capital punishment" tends to be used when referring to the punishment itself. --
Necrothesp (
talk) 13:01, 2 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Support. It's the COMMONNAME, as has been shown, and per common sense. Any argument that there is some kind of difference between the two terms is not following common usage in reliable sources or this article. Dictionaries list them as synonyms of one another. --
Jfhutson (
talk) 18:00, 4 April 2024 (UTC)reply
-Capital Punishment: The practice of putting a person to
death as a punishment for a
crime. 🇺🇲JayCubby✡ please edit my user page! Talk 15:12, 9 April 2024 (UTC)reply
These do not line up with Moxy's definitions. A punishment is not a judicial sentence, but an act, just like a practice. Each of these lists the other as a synonym in the Wiktionary (which is not a reliable source anyway). What would be the difference between encyclopedia articles on the death penalty and capital punishment? --
JFHutson (
talk) 16:03, 9 April 2024 (UTC)reply
@
Jfhutson I feel that the article should be on the practice of doing something, in this case executing prisoners, rather than simply sentencing them. See also
Britannica. 🇺🇲JayCubby✡ please edit my user page! Talk 16:11, 9 April 2024 (UTC)reply
I don't think the Britannica is being very precise with "sometimes used interchangeably;" I think it's usually or almost always used interchangeably. For example, this passage from our article is clearly talking about execution and uses "death penalty": "However, a spike in serious, violent crimes, such as murders or terrorist attacks, has prompted some countries to effectively end the moratorium on the death penalty. One notable example is Pakistan which in December 2014 lifted a six-year moratorium on executions..." But regardless, most of the article is on the penalty in general, the topic of which of course includes execution, and I think that's what people expect from this article, whether it's called capital punishment or death penalty. The sections on "Methods," "Public execution," and "Non-painful execution" are more properly about the practice of execution. --
JFHutson (
talk) 16:39, 9 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Comment/weak oppose: I just spent half an hour in
Westlaw to see if I could find any differences in the way these terms are used, as I think that is a more important question than google searches (
this doesn't mean we should move 'oranges'). While the two terms are often used interchangeably, there is some nuance to the definitions. Capital punishment is generally defined as the act itself:
Garland focuses on more than capital punishment, which he defines as "a practice whereby a properly constituted authority puts to death a convicted offender in punishment for a crime" ...
— David T. Johnson, American Capital Punishment in Comparative Perspective, 36 Law & Soc. Inquiry 1033, 1035 (2011)
"Death penalty" is more often used to refer to the legal decision made by the judge/jury, the laws surrounding, and any legislative acts allowing/barring the punishment. E.g., "death penalty jurisprudence" appears nearly four times as often in secondary sources as "capital punishment jurisprudence". "Death penalty statute" beats out "capital punishment statute" by nearly the exact same ratio in secondary sources. I don't have a strong feeling about this, but legally they might refer to different things. In our article, we've kind of mixed the two terms right from the start: Capital punishment ... is the state-sanctioned practice of killing a person as a punishment for a crime, usually following an authorised, rule-governed process to conclude that the person is responsible for violating norms that warrant said punishment. The first bold would be capital punishment, the second the death penalty. Do we care about that? Should we separate those two things out further? I'm leaning oppose because I think it makes more sense here for the umbrella term here to be the punishment, not the legal regime that makes the punishment possible, but there might not be enough distinction in substance for other editors. Regardless, I think that's the issue we should be weighing.
Alyo(
chat·
edits) 16:52, 9 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose: Capital punishment is more correct.
Tad Lincoln (
talk) 22:25, 11 April 2024 (UTC)reply
it was not necessarily correct but they are the same, and death penalty is a more commonly used term instead of capital punishment
NelsonLee20042020 (
talk) 23:42, 12 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose. They're not exactly the same thing.
StAnselm (
talk) 14:03, 12 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose: They are different things. Death penalty is capital punishment's application, whereas capital punishment (the word punishment is in noun form) refers to the legal concept itself. The latter is what the article is about.
UmbrellaTheLeef (
talk) 00:13, 13 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Correction: I said "noun" when I meant "uncountable". I know that punishment is never anything but a noun.
UmbrellaTheLeef (
talk) 00:25, 13 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose per @
Alyo's well-reasoned argument. This article is about capital punishment, not the death penalty.
WP:COMMONNAME says that we should go by what reliable sources say, and reliable sources define the terms differently. The fact that one or the other might have more Google search results is irrelevant since they're different things.
voorts (
talk/
contributions) 04:31, 13 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Oppose. Penalty and punishment have ultimately the same etymological root and dictionaries naturally mention one term when defining the other. That doesn't mean that the existence of different words is a linguistic dead-end and that there is no difference between the words or the various phrases that employ them.
WP:COMMONNAME does not condemn Wikipedia to using a restricted vocabulary; that would be, if not quite a death penalty for the encylopedia, cruel punishment for our hubristic endeavour.
NebY (
talk) 17:27, 13 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Support I have read all of the arguments above. The only two arguments that I see that are based on a logical premise are: 1. The WP:COMMONNAME arguments which state that the page should use the most common of the terms that describe the contents of the article. 2.The distinction between the dictionary descriptions of Capital Punishment and the Death Penalty "Capital punishment ... is the state-sanctioned practice of killing a person as a punishment for a crime, usually following an authorised, rule-governed process to conclude that the person is responsible for violating norms that warrant said punishment."
The argument has been made that the public and the article co-mingle the two terms, and use them interchangeably, which means that they are not
WP:CONCISE to the detriment of the quality of the article. This can be remedied through editing and so the argument is obviated by the ability to correct the comingling or lack of concise usage. Whichever term is used, the article should make it clear of the differences to the reader of the usage and differences between the two terms and their application.
I support the move perhaps for unlogical and unscholarly ideological reasons, that the term Death Penalty is much more severe and not a euphemism for the decision to kill a person. :Thus, electing to use Death Penalty connects to the minds of the readers in an important psychologically present way that the alternative vernacular use of Capital Punishment. I also admit that I am not impartial on the matter, I exhibit an implicit and explicit bias to use the term that causes the reader/pubic a greater aversion to the death penalty.
eximo (
talk) 00:34, 16 April 2024 (UTC)reply