This chapter addresses the potential contributions of neuroscience to legal policy in general and criminal justice in particular. The central question is whether neuroscience is relevant to legal policy. The chapter begins with speculation about the source of claims for the positive influence of neuroscience. It then turns to the scientific status of behavioral neuroscience. The next section considers the two radical challenges to current policies that neuroscience allegedly poses: determinism and the death of agency. The penultimate section addresses the question of the specific relevance of neuroscience to legal doctrine, practice and institutions. The final section points to some areas warranting modest optimism. The general conclusion, ...
Law and neuroscience is approaching an inflection point. It has been roughly ten years since the New...
Over the course of the last decade neuroscience has become interwoven with law; this has become a wo...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: “Genetics may yet t...
This chapter addresses the potential contributions of neuroscience to legal policy in general and cr...
This chapter suggests on conceptual and empirical grounds that at present neuroscience does not have...
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the relation of neuroscience and the law. Far ...
Claims for the relevance and importance of neuroscience for law are stronger than ever. Notwithstand...
Despite a large and growing interest in applying brain science to the ends of justice, the implicati...
This introductory chapter is an overview on the theory and applications of both the fields of law an...
This chapter considers the claims made on behalf of neuroscience in three areas: legal philosophy, e...
Legislators, jurists, and advocates often turn to science to solve complicated normative problems ad...
The intersection between law and neuroscience has been a focus of intense research for the past deca...
Neuroscientific evidence is increasingly being introduced in legal contexts, and neurolaw scholarshi...
SummaryStunning technical advances in the ability to image the human brain have provoked excited spe...
Neuroenthusiasts and neuroskeptics both exaggerate the strength of their positions. Neuroscience is ...
Law and neuroscience is approaching an inflection point. It has been roughly ten years since the New...
Over the course of the last decade neuroscience has become interwoven with law; this has become a wo...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: “Genetics may yet t...
This chapter addresses the potential contributions of neuroscience to legal policy in general and cr...
This chapter suggests on conceptual and empirical grounds that at present neuroscience does not have...
In recent years there has been increasing interest in the relation of neuroscience and the law. Far ...
Claims for the relevance and importance of neuroscience for law are stronger than ever. Notwithstand...
Despite a large and growing interest in applying brain science to the ends of justice, the implicati...
This introductory chapter is an overview on the theory and applications of both the fields of law an...
This chapter considers the claims made on behalf of neuroscience in three areas: legal philosophy, e...
Legislators, jurists, and advocates often turn to science to solve complicated normative problems ad...
The intersection between law and neuroscience has been a focus of intense research for the past deca...
Neuroscientific evidence is increasingly being introduced in legal contexts, and neurolaw scholarshi...
SummaryStunning technical advances in the ability to image the human brain have provoked excited spe...
Neuroenthusiasts and neuroskeptics both exaggerate the strength of their positions. Neuroscience is ...
Law and neuroscience is approaching an inflection point. It has been roughly ten years since the New...
Over the course of the last decade neuroscience has become interwoven with law; this has become a wo...
In a 2002 editorial published in The Economist, the following warning was given: “Genetics may yet t...