This is a book about the role that psychological impairment should play in a theory of criminal liability. Criminal guilt in the Anglo-American legal tradition requires both that the defendant committed some proscribed act and did so with intent knowledge or recklessness. The second requirement corresponds to the intuitive idea that people should not be punished for something they did not do on purpose or if they did not realize what they were doing. Although intuitive this underlying idea can be highly controversial in practice especially in cases involving the insanity defense. This important new book addresses the conceptual and moral foundations of these issues. Unlike many previous works in this area it addresses the automatism and insanity defenses by examining the types of functional impairment that typical candidates for these defenses actually suffer. What emerges is a much wider conceptual framework that allows us to understand the significance of psychological states and processes for the attribution of criminal responsibility in a manner that is logically coherent morally defensible and consistent with research in psychopathology.
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