Minds, brains, and law : The conceptual foundations of law and neuroscience
- Oxford Oxford University Press 2013
- 240p xxix
Table of contents; Preface ; Introduction ; Chapter One: Philosophical Issues ; I. The Conceptual and the Empirical ; II. II. Criterial and Inductive Evidence ; III. III. Unconscious Rule Following ; IV. IV. Interpretation ; V. V. Knowledge ; VI. VI. The Mereological Fallacy ; VII. Chapter Two: The Concept of Mind ; VIII. I. Neuro-Reductionism ; IX. II. Eliminative Materialism and the "Theory" of Folk Psychology ; X. III. Two Examples of Neuro-Reductionism and Its Implications for Law ; XI. IV. Conceptions of Mind and the Role of Neuroscience in Law ; XII. Chapter Three: Neuroscience and Legal Theory: Jurisprudence, Morality, and Economics ; XIII. I. Jurisprudence ; XIV. II. Emotion and Moral Judgments ; XV. III. Mind, Moral Grammar, and Knowledge XVI. IV. Neuroeconomics ; XVII. Chapter Four: Brain-Based Lie Detection ; XVIII. I. fMRI Lie Detection ; XIX. II. EEG Lie Detection ("Brain Fingerprinting") ; XX. III. Analysis: Empirical, Conceptual, and Practical Issues ; XXI. Chapter Five: Criminal Law Doctrine ; XXII. I. Actus reus ; XXIII. II. Mens rea ; XXIV. III. Insanity ; XXV. Chapter Six: Criminal Procedure ; XXVI. I. Fourth Amendment ; XXVII. II. Fifth Amendment ; XXVIII. III. Due Process ; XXIX. Chapter Seven: Theories of Criminal Punishment ; XXX. I. A Brief Taxonomy of Theories of Criminal Punishment ; XXXI. II. The First Challenge: Brains and Punishment Decisions ; XXXII. III. The Second Challenge: Neuroscience and Intuitions about Punishment ; XXXIII. Conclusion ; XXXIV. Bibliography
9780199812134
1. Jurisprudence - Brain - Philosophical Thought2. Practice Of Law - Psychological Aspects 3. Cognitive Neuroscience