ABSTRACT

Lawrie Reznek addresses these questions and more in his controversial investigation of the insanity defense in Evil or Ill? Drawing from countless intriguing case examples, he aims to understand the concept of an excuse, and explains why the law excuses certain actions and not others. In his easily accessible and elegant style, he explains that in law, there exists two excuses derived from Aristotle: the excuses of ignorance and compulsion. Reznek, however proposes a third excuse - the excuse of character change. In introducing this third excuse, Reznek raises a controversial possibility - the abolition of the insanity defence.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

The diagnosis of evil

chapter |23 pages

A Taxonomy of Defences

chapter |14 pages

Ignorance as an Excuse

chapter |18 pages

Compulsion as an Excuse

chapter |22 pages

Automatism as an Excuse

chapter |17 pages

Causality as an Excuse

chapter |21 pages

The Reductionist Theory

chapter |27 pages

Irrationality as an Excuse

chapter |23 pages

The Concept of Disease

chapter |20 pages

The Clash of Paradigms

chapter |16 pages

Conclusion

Psychiatric justice