Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky: What really is the greater good
Widening Horizons by Collin Tice
Episode notes
This podcast explores Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment follow the psychological collapse and eventual redemption of Rodion Raskolnikov, a destitute student in St. Petersburg. Driven by a distorted theory that extraordinary individuals have the right to commit crimes for a greater good, he murders an elderly pawnbroker and her sister with an axe. The narrative illustrates his subsequent mental alienation, the mounting pressure from the investigator Porfiry Petrovitch, and the intersecting lives of the impoverished Marmeladov family. Specifically, the selfless and spiritual Sonia Marmeladov serves as a moral compass, urging him to confess and embrace suffering. Ultimately, the text describes Raskolnikov’s legal conviction and his journey toward spiritual regeneration while serving his sentence in a Siberian prison. This selection highlights the no ...