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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $86.95

Format:
Paperback
250 pp.
156 mm x 234 mm

ISBN-13:
9780199551637

Publication date:
September 2010

Imprint: OUP UK


Responsibility and psychopathy

Interfacing law, psychiatry and philosophy

Edited by Dr. Luca Malatesti and John McMillan

Series : International Perspectives in Philosophy & Psychiatry

Psychopaths have emotional impairments that can be expressed in persistent criminal behaviour. UK and US law has traditionally excused disordered individuals for their crimes citing these emotional impairments as a cause for their criminal behaviour. The discussion of whether psychopaths are morally responsible for their behaviour has long taken place in the realm of philosophy. However, in recent years, this has moved into scientific and psychiatric investigation, fundamentally so with the development of Robert Hare's diagnostic tool, the Psychopathy Checklist.

Responsibility and Psychopathy explores the moral responsibility of psychopaths. It engages with problems at the interface of law, psychiatry, and philosophy, and is divided into three parts providing relevant interdisciplinary background information to address this main problem.

The first part discusses the public policy and legal responses to psychopathy. It offers an introduction to the central practical issue of how public policy should respond to psychopathy, giving insights for those arguing about the responsibility of psychopaths.

The second part introduces recent scientific advancements in the classification, description, and explanation of psychopathy. In particular, Robert Hare illustrates and defends his Psychopathy Checklist (PCL). Surveys of the most recent brain imaging studies on psychopaths and the prospects for treatment are also included.

The third part of the volume includes chapters covering the most significant dimensions of philosophical debate on the moral and criminal responsibility of psychopaths. In relation to this issue, philosophers have considered whether psychopathic offenders possess moral understanding and/or are capable of controlling their criminal behaviour. This part illustrates how answering these questions involves investigating highly debated and central philosophical problems. These difficulties concern the nature of moral understanding, the significance of emotive and cognitive faculties in moral understanding and motivation, and the most appropriate account of moral and criminal responsibility that can justify a response to the psychopathic offenders.

Exploring one of the most contentious topics of our time, this book is fascinating reading for psychiatrists, philosophers, criminologists, and lawyers.

Readership : Psychiatrists, philosophers, psychologists, and criminologists.

1. John McMillan and Luca Malatesti: Introduction: interfacing law, philosophy and psychiatry
Psychopathy and the Law
2. Tony Ward: Psychopathy and criminal responsibility in historical perspective
3. Peter Bartlett: Stabbing in the dark: English law relating to psychopathy
4. Stephen J. Morse: Psychopathy and the law: the United States experience
5. Matt Matravers: Policies, law and psychopathy: a critical stance from political philosophy
Psychopathy: A New Research Paradigm
6. Luca Malatesti and John McMillan: Defending PCL-R
7. Robert D. Hare and Craig S. Neumann: Psychopathy: assessment and forensic implications
8. Carla Harenski, Robert D. Hare, and Kent A. Kiehl: Neurodevelopmental bases of psychopathy: a review of brain imaging studies
9. James R. P. Ogloff and Melisa Wood: The treatment of psychopathy: clinical nihilism or steps in the right direction?
The Responsibility of the Psychopathic Offender
10. John McMillan and Luca Malatesti: Responsibility and psychopathy
11. Antony Duff: Psychopathy and answerability
12. Neil Levy: Psychopathy, responsibility and the moral/conventional distinction
13. Heidi L. Maibom: Rationalism, emotivism, and the psychopath
14. Jeanette Kennett: Reasons, emotion, and moral judgment in the psychopath
15. Ishtiyaque Haji: The inauthentic evaluative schemes of psychopaths and culpability
16. Grant Gillett: Intentional action, moral responsibility and psychopaths
17. Ronald de Sousa and Douglas Heinrichs: Will a stroke of neuroscience ever eradicate evil?
18. Luca Malatesti and John McMillan: Conclusions: psychopathy and responsibility, a rejoinder

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Luca Malatesti received his doctorate in philosophy of science from the University of Genoa and his doctorate in philosophy from the University of Stirling. He was Wellcome Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Institute of Applied Ethics at the University of Hull. He is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of Rijeka (Croatia). His areas of research are philosophy of mind and philosophy of psychiatry. John McMillan is Associate Professor at the School of Medicine, Flinders University. Prior to this appointment he worked at the Hull York Medical School (2004-9), Cambridge (2002-4), Oxford (1998-2002) and Otago (1995-8) where he taught ethics to philosophy and medical students. He is an editor of The Principles of Healthcare Ethics (with Ashcroft, Dawson and Draper) 2007, Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry (with Widdershoven, Hope and Van der Scheer) 2008 and The Limits of Consent (with Corrigan, Liddell, Richards and Weijer) 2009. He was a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics working party on ethical issues and dementia which reported on October 1st, 2009. He is about to begin work on a book The Methods of Bioethics (with Adrian Walsh).

Free will and responsibility - Dr. John S. Callender
The actor's brain - Sean Spence

Special Features

  • Brings together in one place an interdisciplinary range of ideas and viewpoints, usually scattered throughout the literature.
  • A book on one of most contentious and debated topics of our times - the moral responsibility of those suffering from psychopathological disorders.
  • Includes contributions from psychologists, philosophers, and lawyers, offering readers within each of those disciplines insights from people outside their own field of expertise.