
Originally Posted by
Printer's Devil
Why was Raskolnikov wrong? Interesting question! I personally think Dostoyevsky got it completely wrong, since he was looking at the situation from a 19th century viewpoint (but then again, maybe he was just sticking close enough to 19th century moral values to escape censorship...?). Raskolnokov decides, on the basis of his superior intellect and current poverty, that an unpleasant and unpopular person who happens to be quite well off is intrinsically inferior to him to the point where it's perfectly OK to murder her and take her money for his own benefit so long as he can get away with it. By today's standards, he's a psychopath. He's not wrong in his own eyes because he doesn't understand the concept. It's true that people, usually those who are rather young and naive, who have been heavily indoctrinated in some belief-system may do terrible things and think it's right, but Raskolnikov literally has no-one to blame but himself. He was short of money, somebody he didn't like had money, so he came up with a philosophical justification why it was OK for him to split her skull with an axe. He's a psychopath. Period.
Where Dostoyevsky goes wrong is assuming that everybody has morals somewhere deep down. His other novel "The Devils" is a far better treatment of this theme. Stavrogin impulsively commits one horrendous act, and that glimpse into the darkest depths of his soul is too much for him to bear. But he doesn't succumb to a convenient attack of "brain fever" (a non-existent ailment which everybody in the 19th century, especially people in countries where uninhibited displays of strong emotion were common, such as Russia, thought was real, but which was in truth a composite of everything from getting a bit over-excited to meningitis) and babble out the details to any cops who happen to be in the room. He continues to act more or less normally throughout the book, while slowly but inexorably falling apart from the inside.
Stavrogin would, if he lived in the real world, be a better person than Raskolnikov. He does something absolutely dreadful on a momentary impulse, but he instantly knows it was a horrible thing to do. And this one impulsive act, and its consequences, reveal a personal truth that he cannot get away from. He has a conscience, and from that moment on, he's doomed, because he literally cannot live with himself. But Raskolnikov? He's spent months persuading himself that murder is just fine, because humans who happen to resemble himself are Supermen, and other people aren't. He's a psychopath, plain an simple! So it's somewhat unrealistic that when, in the course of his execution of pre-meditated first-degree murder for no purpose other than personal gain, he has to kill a completely irrelevant mentally retarded woman as well, he feels that guilty about it.
Though actually it's Dostoyevsky's way of saying that, had he not killed a genuinely innocent person by mistake, Raskolnikov probably wouldn't have given a damn. A wee bit of camouflage there for the Russian censors, perhaps...? And by the way, anyone, however superficially unpleasant, who cares for a mentally disabled relative (who by 19th century standards was officially inferior to other human beings) is a lot better overall than Raskolnikov, who has to learn (unconvincingly) how to care about anyone at all.
Raskolnikov killed two people from sheer arrogance, and then panicked and started whining. He has elements of both major forms of psychopath - aggressive and inadequate. Both can be horribly persuasive. In reality, Sonya (along with his best buddy, who is throughout the book presented as ludicrously optimistic and a bit thick) is in for a very rude awakening. Stavrogin is a flawed human being who knows it all along, and achieves no false redemption because after what he did, it's impossible. Raskolnikov is just a hypocrite. See also "A Clockwork Orange", with which this novel has surprising parallels. Which, given the literary erudition of Anthony Burgess, are probably not accidental.
If I got too metatextual there, feel free to argue. It could get interesting!