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Neurolaw and Responsibility for Action: Concepts, Crimes, and Courts

Neurolaw and Responsibility for Action: Concepts, Crimes, and Courts

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Cambridge University Press, 1/2/2020
EAN 9781108450928, ISBN10: 110845092X

Paperback, 314 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm
Language: English

Law regulates human behaviour, a phenomenon about which neuroscience has much to say. Neuroscience can tell us whether a defendant suffers from a brain abnormality, or injury and it can correlate these neural deficits with criminal offending. Using fMRI and other technologies it might indicate whether a witness is telling lies or the truth. It can further propose neuro-interventions to 'change' the brains of offenders and so to reduce their propensity to offend. And, it can make suggestions about whether a defendant knows or merely suspects a prohibited state of affairs; so, drawing distinctions among the mental states that are central to legal responsibility. Each of these matters has philosophical import; is a neurological 'deficit' inculpatory or exculpatory; what is the proper role for law if the mind is no more than the brain; is lying really a brain state and can neuroscience really 'read' the brain? In this edited collection, leading contributors to the field provide new insights on these matters, bringing to light the great challenges that arise when disciplinary boundaries merge.

Introduction
Part I. Conceptual Disputes
Brains as the Locus of Responsibility?
1. Neuroscience and the explanation of human action Dennis Patterson
2. 'Nothing but a pack of neurons:' the moral responsibility of the human machine Michael S. Moore
3. Non-eliminative reductionism
not the theory of mind some responsibility theorists want, but the one they need Katrina Sifferd
4. Intention as non-observational knowledge
rescuing responsibility from the brain Bebhinn Donnelly-Lazarov
5. Efficient causation and neuroscientific explanations of criminal action Nick J. Davis
Part II. Epistemic Disputes
What does Neuroscience Tell Law about Responsibility?
6. Lying, deception, and fMRI
a critical update Michael S. Pardo
7. Brain-based lie detection and the mereological fallacy
reasons for optimism John Danaher
8. Is brain reading mind reading? Pim Haselager and Giulio Mecacci
Part III. Implications for Courts and Defendants
9. Unlucky, bad, and the space in between
why criminologists should think more about responsibility Peter Raynor
10. Neuroscience and the criminal jurisdiction
a new approach to reliability and admissibility in the courts of England and Wales Joanna Glynn
11. Should individuals with psychopathy be compensated for their fearlessness? (Or how neuroscience matters for equality) Marion Godman
12. The treatment of psychopathy
conceptual and ethical issues Elizabeth Shaw.