The controversial relationship between neuroscience and moral responsibility in psychopaths
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Muñoz Negro, José Eduardo; Martínez Barbero, José Pablo; Smith, Felicity; Leonard, Brooke; Padilla Martínez, Jaime; Ibáñez-Casas, InmaculadaMateria
Psicopatía Responsabilidad moral Neurociencias Neuroética Psychopathy Moral responsability Neurosciences Neuroethics
Fecha
2018-06Referencia bibliográfica
Muñoz-Negro, J.E., Martínez Barbero, J.P., Smith, F. et al. The controversial relationship between neuroscience and moral responsibility in psychopaths. Egypt J Forensic Sci 8, 40 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41935-018-0071-9
Resumen
Background: From fields such as neuroethics and legal medicine it is increasingly common to raise the issue on
whether it is necessary to rethink questions such as moral and criminal responsibility in individuals fulfilling Hare’s
criteria for psychopathy. The Hare’s Psychopathy Checklist Revised is currently the diagnostic gold standard for psychopathy
and defines a type of personality characterized by interpersonal, affective, and behavioral symptoms. Moral and criminal
responsibility in these individuals is now being reconsidered due to new data provided by neuroscience. However, the
translation from these neuroscientific findings into terms of moral responsibility is neither direct nor evident. The aim of
this review is to assemble the available neuroscientific evidence and to clarify the moral consequences of these findings.
Main text: A genetic base for psychopathy exists as well as brain functionality or even structural variations. However,
these structural changes are not robust and consistent across the different studies. Moreover, this body of evidence uses
different methodologies and, for this reason, it is hardly comparable. Findings from the field of neuropsychology such as
the emotional alterations, empathy impairment or emotional theory of mind (ToM) deviance are equivocal, controversial,
and a focus of debate. These can be well understood as correlates of the particular psychopaths’ moral functioning more
than as a deterministic causality for their conduct. In addition, a biological and neuropsychological model of
moral responsibility open to scientific analysis does not exist. Ultimately, moral responsibility has a biological
and neuropsychological basis, but it cannot be fully explained by these constructs.
Conclusion: This review assesses new findings in the study of moral and criminal responsibility in psychopaths, and
the different interpretations about them. It concludes that, in the absence of an experimental model of moral
responsibility, current data, though controversial, are not definitive arguments that can reduce or to eliminate moral,
and subsequently, criminal responsibility.