Homicidal Insanity, 1800-1985.
Material type: TextSeries: History Amer Science and Technol SerPublisher: Tuscaloosa : University of Alabama Press, 1988Copyright date: ©1988Edition: 2nd edDescription: 1 online resource (194 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780817382674Subject(s): Homicide - historyGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Homicidal Insanity, 1800-1985DDC classification: 614.1 LOC classification: RA1151Online resources: Click to ViewIntro -- Contents -- Foreword -- 1. The Issue of Insane Homicide -- 2. The Theoretical Boundaries of Dangerousness, 1800-1840 -- 3. The Development of a Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity -- 4. From Static Brain to Dynamic Neurophysiology, 1840-1870 -- 5. The Non-Asylum Treatment of the Insane -- 6. Homicidal Insanity and the Unstable Nervous System, 1870-1910 -- 7. Psychoanalysis and Medical Criminology -- 8. Somatic and Dynamic Dangerousness, 1910-1960 -- 9. Prediction, Confidentiality, and the Duty to Warn -- 10. The Phenomenology of Homicidal Insanity -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
Homicidal insanity has remained a vexation to both the psychiatric and legal professions despite the panorama of scientific and social change during the past 200 years. The predominant opinion today among psychiatrists is that no correlation exists between dangerousness and specific mental disorders. But for generation after generation, psychiatrists have reported cases of insane homicide that were clinically similar. Although psychiatric theory changed and psychiatric nosology was inconsistent, the mental phenomena psychiatrists identified in such cases remained the same. The central thesis of Homicidal Insanity is that as psychiatric theory changed, psychiatrists regarded these phenomena variously as symptoms of mental disease or the disease in itself. It is possible to trace these phenomena throughout the history of Anglo-American psychiatric theory and practice. A secondary thesis of the book is that psychiatrists have used these phenomena as predictors and markers in the practical matters of preventing insane homicide and of testifying in the courts to defend the irresponsible and expose the culpable. For 200 years, scientific and philosophical disagreement raised controversy and brought the issues to public attention. Still, to this day no rational method exists to discriminate the dangerous from the harmless in matters of involuntary commitment, nor insanity from crime in the courts.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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