000 02153nam a2200229 a 4500
005 20160407161814.0
008 141201s2009 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780754670131
040 _aMAIN
041 _aEnglish
082 _a340.19
_bFRE/LAW
100 _aFreeman, Michael (Ed.)
245 _aLaw, mind and brain
_cedited by Michael Freeman and Oliver R. Goodenough.
260 _aEngland :
_bAshgate,
_c2009.
300 _a416 p.
440 _a(Medical law and ethics)
500 _aTable of contents: Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. Law, responsibility and the brain Chapter 3. Brain imaging and courtroom evidence : on the admissibility and persuasiveness of MRI Chapter 4. Mind the gap : problems of mind, body and brain in the criminal law Chapter 5. Self-exclusion agreements : should we be free not to be free to ruin ourselves? : gambling, self-exclusion agreements and the brain Chapter 6. The problems with blaming Chapter 7. Why distinguish "mental" and "physical" illness in the law of involuntary treatment? Chapter 8. A stable paradigm : revisiting capacity, vulnerability and the rights claims of adolescents after Roper v. Simmons Chapter 9. Thinking like a child : legal implications of recent developments in brain research for juvenile offenders Chapter 10. Legal implications of memory-dampening Chapter 11. Reframing the good death : enhancing choice in dying, neuroscience, end-of-life research and the potential of psychedelics in palliative care Chapter 12. Equality in exchange revisited : from an evolutionary (genetic and cultural) point of view Chapter 13. Just (and efficient?) compensation for governmental expropriations Chapter 14. Examining the biological bases of family law : lessons to be learned from the evolutionary analysis of law Chapter 15. Why do good people steal intellectual property? Chapter 16. Cues in the courtroom : when do they improve jurors' decisions? Chapter 17. Reflections on reading : words and pictures and law Index.
650 _aLaw--Psychological aspects.
650 _aForensic psychology.
700 _aGoodenough, Oliver R.
942 _cBK
999 _c8016
_d8016