The punisher's brain : the evolution of judge and jury

Bibliographic Information

The punisher's brain : the evolution of judge and jury

Morris B. Hoffman

(Cambridge studies in economics, choice, and society)

Cambridge University Press, 2014

  • : hardback

Available at  / 12 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Why do we punish, and why do we forgive? Are these learned behaviors, or is there something deeper going on? This book argues that there is indeed something deeper going on, and that our essential response to the killers, rapists, and other wrongdoers among us has been programmed into our brains by evolution. Using evidence and arguments from neuroscience and evolutionary psychology, Morris B. Hoffman traces the development of our innate drives to punish - and to forgive - throughout human history. He describes how, over time, these innate drives became codified into our present legal systems and how the responsibility and authority to punish and forgive was delegated to one person - the judge - or a subset of the group - the jury. Hoffman shows how these urges inform our most deeply held legal principles and how they might animate some legal reforms.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. The most original of original sins
  • 2. Detecting and blaming
  • 3. First-party punishment: conscience and guilt
  • 4. Second-party punishment: retaliation and revenge
  • 5. Third-party punishment: retribution
  • 6. Forgiveness and its signals
  • 7. Delegating punishment
  • 8. Legal dissonances
  • 9. Evaluating some process dissonances
  • 10. Into the gap: evaluating some substantive dissonances
  • 11. Brains punishing brains.

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