Description |
1 online resource (592 pages) |
Contents |
Front Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright; Dedication; Acknowledgments; Contents; Bibliography of Bernard L. Diamond; Editor's Introduction; 1 Psychoanalysis in the Courtroom; 2 The Origins and Development of the "Wild Beast" Concept of Mental Illness and Its Relation to Theories of Criminal Responsibility; 3 The Origins of the "Right and Wrong" Test of Criminal Responsibility and Its Subsequent Development in the United States: An Historical Survey; 4 Criminal Responsibility of the Mentally Ill; 5 With Malice Aforethought; 6 The Psychiatric Prediction of Dangerousness |
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7 The Simulation of Sanity8 Inherent Problems in the Use of Pretrial Hypnosis on a Prospective Witness; 9 Reasonable Medical Certainty, Diagnostic Thresholds, and Definitions of Mental Illness in the Legal Context; 10 The Fallacy of the Impartial Expert; 11 The Psychiatrist as Expert Witness; 12 From M'Naghten to Currens, and Beyond; Index |
Summary |
Over the course of an illustrious career, the late Bernard Diamond established himself as the preeminent forensic psychiatrist of the century. The Psychiatrist in the Courtroom brings together in a single volume Diamond's pivotal contributions to a variety of important issues, including the nature of diminished capacity, the fallacy of the impartial expert, the predictability of dangerousness, and the unacceptability of hypnotically facilitated memory in courtroom proceedings. Ably introduced and edited by Jacques M. Quen, M.D., a close colleague of Diamond's and leading historian of |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Forensic psychiatry.
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MEDICAL -- Forensic Medicine.
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MEDICAL -- Preventive Medicine.
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MEDICAL -- Public Health.
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Forensic psychiatry
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Quen, Jacques M., 1928-
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ISBN |
9781134888306 |
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1134888309 |
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