Neurolaw and responsibility for action : concepts, crimes, and courts
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Neurolaw and responsibility for action : concepts, crimes, and courts
Cambridge University Press, 2018
- : hard
Available at / 4 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-290) and index (p.291-302)
Contents of Works
- Neuroscience and the explanation of human action / Dennis Patterson
- "Nothing but a pack of neurons" : the moral responsibility of the human machine / Michael S. Moore
- Non-eliminative reductionism : not the theory of mind some responsibility theorists want, but the one they need / Katrina Sifferd
- Intention as non-observational knowledge : rescuing responsibility from the brain / Bebhinn Donnelly-Lazarov
- Efficient causation and neuroscientific explanations of criminal action / Nick J. Davis
- Lying, deception, and fMRI : a critical update / Michael S. Pardo
- Brain-based lie detection and the mereological fallacy : reasons for optimism / John Danaher
- Is brain reading mind reading? / Pim Haselager and Giulio Mecacci
- Unlucky, bad, and the space in between : why criminologists should think more about responsibility / Peter Raynor
- Neuroscience and the criminal jurisdiction : a new approach to reliability and admissibility in the courts of England and Wales / Joanna Glynn
- Should individuals with psychopathy be compensated for their fearlessness? (or how neuroscience matters for equality) / Marion Godman
- The treatment of psychopathy: conceptual and ethical issues / Elizabeth Shaw