Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 97 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 30
Page 184
... capacity is impaired . This implies that criminal law and morality treat agents as victims of circumstance insofar as circumstances impair their capacity to reach a rational decision . When a person suffering from impaired capacity ...
... capacity is impaired . This implies that criminal law and morality treat agents as victims of circumstance insofar as circumstances impair their capacity to reach a rational decision . When a person suffering from impaired capacity ...
Page 185
... capacity is and should be understood in criminal law . Those who are under the age of criminal responsibility or who are exempt on the ground of insanity are exempt because they do not in general sufficiently understand what causes what ...
... capacity is and should be understood in criminal law . Those who are under the age of criminal responsibility or who are exempt on the ground of insanity are exempt because they do not in general sufficiently understand what causes what ...
Page 186
... capacity , consequences for penal policy follow that go beyond the allowance for impaired capacity that is already built into the legal system . For if account is taken of the extent to which people are handicapped by impaired capacity ...
... capacity , consequences for penal policy follow that go beyond the allowance for impaired capacity that is already built into the legal system . For if account is taken of the extent to which people are handicapped by impaired capacity ...
Contents
Lectures | 1 |
Life and Work in Shakespeares Poems | 15 |
The Poetry of the Caroline Court | 51 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actions African ancient Anthropology archaeology behaviour Beveridge curve Birley Britain British Academy British Museum Burrow Cambridge capacity century cognitive College criminal critics Crombie cultural dialogue dyad dyadic E. N. Goody early Ebla edition Edmund Leach Edwards England English society essay Essenes example excavations gumsa Hadrian's Wall hierarchy historians honour human important Indian individual Institute intellectual interaction interest John joint joint attention joking relationship Kachin labour labour-market later lecture linguistic literary Lloyd London meaning Meyer Fortes mind modern moral move Orgel Oxford paper patrilineal period person Piggott plagiarism plagiarist poems political printed Professor published question Qumran Radcliffe-Brown recognised Renaissance responsible role dyad Roman Britain Sanskrit scholars scrolls sense Shakespeare's Shakespeare's Sonnets social intelligence social structure Sonnets spoken language Stokes Stokes's Stuart texts things tion tradition unemployment University volume Winthrop's writing