Emotions are ubiquitous in criminal law, as they are in life. But how do they, and how should they, affect legal assessment? Should the law be more sympathetic to defendants who are taken over by passions such as anger and fear, or should it view such defendants as especially dangerous? Or should the response of the law depend on an appraisal of the emotion itself-whether it is appropriate or inappropriate, reasonable or unreasonable ? What does it mean for an emotion to be reasonable? Aren\u27t emotions, after all,just disturbances of the personality that can be more or less strong but that are always hostile to reason? Or do they embody judgments, ways of seeing the world? If they do, should we hold people morally accountable for those...
Using insights from philosophy and modern neuroscience, I explore emotion and other affective experi...
Previous research has demonstrated that anger increases the tendency to blame and punish others for ...
The article offers an Aristotelian analysis of emotion-based defences in criminal law: someone who c...
Emotions are ubiquitous in criminal law, as they are in life. But how do they, and how should they, ...
This thesis examines the role of emotion in the criminal law. It identifies the current understandi...
This doctoral thesis aims to provide an answer to the question of why the criminal law should be con...
During the last decade, a process of ‘emotionalization of law ’ has spread around the globe, changin...
Why require Justice to be blind to passions? The standard model of jurisprudence offers two lines of...
Imagine you have committed a crime. You might experience any number of emotional responses to what y...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been ...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been ...
M.A. (Philosophy)Usually when we think of law, we think of rationality and outcomes that are not swa...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
Legal scholarship on behavioralism and the implications of cognitive biases for the law is flouris...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been...
Using insights from philosophy and modern neuroscience, I explore emotion and other affective experi...
Previous research has demonstrated that anger increases the tendency to blame and punish others for ...
The article offers an Aristotelian analysis of emotion-based defences in criminal law: someone who c...
Emotions are ubiquitous in criminal law, as they are in life. But how do they, and how should they, ...
This thesis examines the role of emotion in the criminal law. It identifies the current understandi...
This doctoral thesis aims to provide an answer to the question of why the criminal law should be con...
During the last decade, a process of ‘emotionalization of law ’ has spread around the globe, changin...
Why require Justice to be blind to passions? The standard model of jurisprudence offers two lines of...
Imagine you have committed a crime. You might experience any number of emotional responses to what y...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been ...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been ...
M.A. (Philosophy)Usually when we think of law, we think of rationality and outcomes that are not swa...
In this perspective piece, the author attacks the notion of moral involuntariness in the Supreme C...
Legal scholarship on behavioralism and the implications of cognitive biases for the law is flouris...
Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been...
Using insights from philosophy and modern neuroscience, I explore emotion and other affective experi...
Previous research has demonstrated that anger increases the tendency to blame and punish others for ...
The article offers an Aristotelian analysis of emotion-based defences in criminal law: someone who c...