This book explains the ethical and conceptual tensions in the use of psychopathy in different countries, including America, Canada, the UK, Croatia, Australia, and New Zealand. It offers an extensive critical analysis of how psychopathy functions within institutional and social contexts.
Inside, readers will find innovative interdisciplinary analysis, written by leading international experts. The chapters explore how different countries have used this diagnosis. A central concern is whether psychopathy is a mental disorder, and this has a bearing upon whether it should be used.
The book’s case studies will help readers understand the problems associated with psychopathy. Academics and students working in the philosophy of psychiatry, bioethics, and moral psychology will find it a valuable resource. In addition, it will also appeal to mental health professionals working in forensic settings, psychologists with an interest in the ethical implications of the use of psychopathy as a construct and particularly those with a research interest in it.
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction to the Volume.- Part I: Diagnosing Psychopathy. Practices, Case Studies, and Practical Concerns.- Chapter 1. Introductory Chapter.- Chapter 2. What it means to be Diagnosed as a Psychopath.- Chapter 3. The uses of the Construct of Psychopathy in the USA.- Chapter 4. The uses of the Construct of Psychopathy in UK.- Chapter 5. Antisocial Personality Disorders and Preventive Sentencing in New Zealand.- Chapter 6. The use of the Notion of Psychopathy within the Legal and Treatment Practice in Croatia.- Part II: The Plausibility of the Construct and the Validity of Psychopathy: Psychometric and Philosophical Issues.- Chapter 7.- Introductory Chapter.- Chapter 8. Psychopathy as a Scientific kind: Epistemic Usefulness, Metaphysical Underpinnings, and kind Construction.- Chapter 9. Capturing the Complexity of Psychopathic Personality Disorder: Recent Developments in the Assessment of the Disorder.- Chapter 10. The State of the Art of Neuropsychological Studies of Psychopathy.- Chapter 11. Psychopathy: Neuro-Hype and its Consequences.- Chapter 12. Psychopathy and the Issue of Existence.- Part III: Is Psychopathy a Mental Illness?.- Chapter 13. The Illness Status of Psychopathy: Between Biological Functions and Norms.- Chapter 14. The Medicalisation of Psychopathy.- Chapetr 15. Sameness in Darkness: Gender and Psychopathy.- Chapter 16. Psychopathy and Societal Values.- Chapter 17. Psychopathy and Public Values.- Conclusion of the Volume.
Over de auteur
Luca Malatesti is an Associate Professor at the Department of Philosophy at the University of Rijeka (Croatia). His research interests are in the philosophy of mind and philosophy of psychiatry. He was Wellcome Trust Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Applied Ethics, Hull (2005-2007). Some of his recent publications are: “The societal response to psychopathy in the community” (with Jurjako and Brazil), International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, forthcoming; “The insanity defence without mental illness? Some considerations” (with Jurjako and Meynen) International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 2020; “Biocognitive classification of antisocial individuals without explanatory reductionism” (with Jurjako and Brazil) Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2020; “The Moral Bioenhancement of Psychopaths” (with Baccarini) Journal of Medical Ethics, 2018. He has co-edited with John Mc Millan Psychopathy and Responsibility: Interfacing Philosophy, Law, and Psychiatry (Oxford University Press, 2010) and he is currently co-authoring with him the book Methodological Issues in Neuroethics: The Case of Responsibility which is under contract with Cambridge University Press.
John Mc Millan is a Professor at the Bioethics Centre at the University of Otago. He has worked for several years broadly within the area of mental health ethics. He is an editor of Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry (Oxford University Press, 2008) and Psychopathy and Responsibility: Interfacing Philosophy, Law and Psychiatry (OUP, 2010). He is a co-author of the Assessment of Mental Capacity: A New Zealand Guide for Doctors and Lawyers (VUP, 2020). His most recent monograph is The Methods of Bioethics: An Essay in Metabioethics which was published by OUP in 2018 and he is currently co-authoring the book Methodological Issues in Neuroethics: The Case of Responsibility which is under contract with Cambridge University Press. He is the current Editor in Chief of the Journal of Medical Ethics.
Predrag Šustar is a Professor at the Department of Philosophy at the University of Rijeka. He was a Fulbright visiting scholar at Columbia University (2006-2007) and elected visiting professor at the University of Padua (2015-2016). His main interests include general philosophy of science, Kant, and, in particular, philosophy of biology with a special focus on the topics of functions, genetic information, biological laws and adaptationism. His recent publications include: “Explanatory Hierarchy of Causal Structures in Molecular Biology” (with Brzović and Balorda) European Journal for Philosophy of Science, forthcoming; “Postgenomics Function Monism” (with Brzović) Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 2020; Harmonia mundi: Kant’s Account of Empirical Cognition (in Croatian), 2019; “The Kindness of Psychopaths” (with Brzović and Jurjako) International Studies in the Philosophy of Science, 2017; “Molecular Challenges to Adaptationism” (with Brzović) in Evolutionary Biology, Pierre Pontarotti ed., 2016; “Natural Selection and the Function Debate: Between ‘Cheap Tricks’ and Evolutionary Neutrality” (with Brzović) Synthese, 2014.