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See allWhile I am not particularly drawn to political philosophy, there is no doubt in the importance of Plato’s Republic. It establishes an early foundation for structured philosophical inquiry and education, presenting a revolutionary conception of justice and truth as objective and systematic rather than conventional. Plato advocates for a deeply ordered approach to governance, grounded in reason and knowledge, emphasizing the pursuit of truth as the necessary basis for legitimate authority.
Contains spoilers
Did you know Kafka once wrote of a man so consumed by guilt
that he carried out a death sentence
for a crime he never committed.
There is no crime at the center of Franz Kafka’s *The Judgment*. No deception, no violence, no moral transgression severe enough to justify its ending. And yet, by the final paragraph, Georg Bendemann accepts a death sentence and carries it out himself. The disturbing power of the story lies not in the father’s authority, but in Georg’s readiness to obey it. The question Kafka forces on the reader is not *why* Georg is punished, but *why he already believes he deserves to be, and how does guilt impact a person*.
*The Judgment* is not just story about a tyrannical father imposing guilt on an immature son; but a story about inherited guilt — guilt that predates action, achievement, and even intention. The father does not create Georg’s condemnation; he merely gives it a voice.
# Part 1: Success as provocation
At the beginning of the story, Our main Character Georg Bendemann appears writing a letter to his mysterious friend in Russia for the first time in a very long time; to tell him of his engagement and growing business. This friend represents a “shadow” version of the life that George may have lived had he fallowed the path of his father. His business is failing, eyes are yellow and he is starving, weak.
Georges father is bed ridden, unhealthy and dependent entirely on his son. On the surface, Georg has surpassed him entirely. And yet this success is shy, almost apologetic. Georg hesitates to share good news. as hes worried his achievements will be seen as arrogant or privileged. His independence is not confident; it is anxious.
This anxiety suggests something crucial: Georg experiences success not as liberation, but as betrayal, and entrapment.
In a healthy dynamic, maturity loosens the bond between parent and child. In Kafka’s world, maturity sharpens it. Georg’s independence does not free him from his father’s authority — it activates it. The more Georg becomes his own person, the more illegitimate he feels the more he abandons those around him. His success is not proof of worth; it is evidence of disloyalty.
The guilt, importantly, precedes the accusation.
## The Father as Internal Authority
The father’s transformation is sudden and surreal. He begins as weak, almost childlike — confined to bed, dependent, diminished. George begins telling his father of the letter that he was writing to his friend, The Father first starts by pretending that he has zero recolection of this friend, claiming over and over he hasn't a qlue of who this person is, Then, in a single moment of shear fury, he rises. He stands on the bed, physically elevated, verbally dominant, and suddenly omniscient. He knows about the friend in Russia. He knows Georg’s intentions. He knows Georg’s guilt, and in a swift trial, says “I sentence you now to death by drowning.”
But this transformation only works because Georg allows it to.
Nothing the father says is verifiable. Much of it is contradictory. Yet Georg does not resist. He does not argue the facts; he collapses inward. This suggests that the father’s authority is not external. He does not overpower Georg — he articulates what Georg already believes about himself.
The father functions less like a character and more like a psychological mechanism: the internalized voice of judgment that emerges when autonomy threatens inherited identity.
## Judgment Without Crime
The sentence itself is the most Kafkaesque element of the story: “I sentence you now to death by drowning.” It is disproportionate, absurd, and delivered without due process. And yet, it works.
Why?
Because Georg does not experience the judgment as punishment — he experiences it as recognition.
This is inherited guilt in its purest form: the belief that one’s existence itself is an offense. Georg does not need to understand the charge. He does not need to protest innocence. The logic of the sentence is irrelevant. What matters is that it names something he has already internalized.
The father does not convince Georg he is guilty. He confirms it.
## Self-Execution and the Tragedy of Obedience
The most devastating moment of *The Judgment* is not the father’s declaration — it is Georg’s obedience. He does not resist, flee, or seek clarification. He runs toward his sentence with a strange sense of relief.
Kafka suggests something deeply unsettling here: when guilt is inherited, punishment feels like resolution. To be judged is to be seen. To be sentenced is to be finished.
Georg’s death is not forced upon him. It is chosen — not freely, but inevitably.
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## Conclusion: Guilt as a Family Heirloom
*The Judgment* is not a story about cruelty disguised as authority. It is a story about how authority survives by living inside us. The father does not need to control Georg’s life — Georg has already done that work for him.
Kafka shows us a world where guilt is not learned through wrongdoing, but passed down like a family name. And in such a world, independence is not rewarded. It is punished — not by society, not by God, but by the voice that asks, *Who gave you permission to become something else?*