Title
Law and Neuroscience
Abstract
Localizing the brain correlates related to moral judgments, using neuroimage techniques (and also studies on brain lesions), seems to be, without doubt, one of the big events in the history of the normative social sciences.The best neuroscientific model of normative judgment available today establishes that the ethical-cerebral law operator counts on, in his neural evaluative-affective systems, a permanent presence of requirements, obligations and strategies, with a “should be” that incorporates internally rational and emotional reasons, that are constitutively integrated in all the activities at the practical, theoretical and normal levels of every process of exercising the law.
Disciplines
Internet Law
Date of this Version
May 2005
Recommended Citation
Atahualpa Fernandez, "Law and Neuroscience" (May 18, 2005). bepress Legal Series. bepress Legal Series.Working Paper 623.
https://law.bepress.com/expresso/eps/623