Law and the Brain
Semir Zeki(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 1. April 2006
Book
Hardback
296 pages
978-0-19-857010-3 (ISBN)
Description
The past 20 years have seen unparalleled advances in neurobiology, with findings from neuroscience being used to shed light on a range of human activities - many historically the province of those in the humanities and social sciences - aesthetics, emotion, consciousness, music. Applying this new knowledge to law seems a natural development - the making, considering, and enforcing of law of course rests on mental processes. However, where some of those activities above can be studied with a certain amount of academic detachment, what we discover about the brain might have considerable implications for how we consider and judge those who follow or indeed flout the law - with inevitable social and political consequences. There are real issues that the legal system will face as neurobiological studies continue to relentlessly probe the human mind - the motives for our actions, our decision making processes, and such issues as free will and responsibility. This volume represents the first serious attempt to address questions of law as reflecting brain activity, emphasizing that it is the organization and functioning of the brain that determines how we enact and obey laws. It applies the most recent developments in brain science to debates over criminal responsibility, cooperation and punishment, deception, moral and legal judgment, property, evolutionary psychology, law and economics, and decision-making by judges and juries. Written and edited by leading specialists from a range of disciplines, the book presents a groundbreaking and challenging new look at human behaviour.
Reviews / Votes
This collection of fourteen fascinating and beautifully written essays is the first emphatic assertion that the law needs neuroscience if it is not to be a hopeless intellectual ostrich, and the first attempt to write a tentative agenda for the debate that has to happen. Few subjects matter more. Anyone who wants to learn the vocabulary of the subject needs this book. British Journal of Psychiatry Vol 189More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
line drawings, Halftones
Halftones and line drawings
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 168 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-19-857010-3 (9780198570103)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
INTRODUCTION; 1. Law and the Brain - an introduction; INTRODUCTORY ESSAYS; 2. The neuroeconomic path of the law; 3. How neuroscience might advance the law; LAW, BIOLOGY AND THE BRAIN; 4. Law and the sources of morality; 5. Law, evolution and the brain: applications and open questions; 6. A neuroscientific approach to normative judgment in law and justice; NEUROECONOMICS AND LAW; 7. The brain and the law; 8. Neuroeconomics; DECISION MAKING AND EVIDENCE; 9. A cognitive neuroscience framework for understanding causal reasoning and the law; TRUTHFULNESS; 10. A cognitive neurobiological account of deception: evidence from functional neuroimaging; PROPERTY IN BIOLOGY AND THE BRAIN; 11. The property 'instinct'; CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY AND PUNISHMENT; 12. For the law, neuroscience changes nothing and everything; 13. The frontal cortex and the criminal justice system; 14. The emergence of consequential thought: evidence from neuroscience; 15. Responsibility and punishment: whose mind? A response