About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

30 Supremo Amicus [538] (2022)
Implications of Neuroscience on Criminal Law

handle is hein.journals/supami30 and id is 538 raw text is: SUPREMO AMICUS

f

VOLUME 30 1 AUGUST, 2022

ISSN 2456-9704

IMPLICATIONS OF
NEUROSCIENCE ON CRIMINAL
LAW
By Ana-Marija Rus
From University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
The human mind is crucially dependent on its
biological basis, the brain, and considering
our moral judgments are fixed on our
decisions and actions, one would expect that
information concerning the neural footings of
the human decision-making process and
action to have a significant implication on our
legal judgments and therefore law.1 2
The    relationship   between    law    and
neuroscience, with the brain lying in as the
correlative factor, is therefore somewhat
apparent, as it possibly offers a more
comprehensive and accurate approach to the
legal phenomena and possibly puts forward
more conclusive evidence for the legal
process, thus    granting  a  fairer  justice
system.Anything that leads to a better,
deeper understanding of people s minds
1 Pernu and Elzein, From Neuroscience to Law:
Bridging the Gap (2020), p.1
2 Supposing that the law is not valuable per se, as it is
instrumentally used to regulate human behaviour in
order to attain justice, and for this purpose, we need an
in-depth understanding of human action.
3 Petoft, Neurolaw: A brief introduction (2015),
p.54
4 Professor by courtesy of Genetics, Stanford School
of Medicine; Director, Center for Law and the
Biosciences;  Director,  Stanford  Program  in
Neuroscience and Society; and Chair, Steering
Committee of the Center for Biomedical Ethics.
5  Chen,   Neurolaw   (2009),  available  at:
https://law.stanford.edu/stanford-
lawyer/articles/neurolaw/
6 S. and Marper v. the United Kingdom, § 105.
7 Modern neuro-technology, the study of a brain in
some form in quasi criminal proceedings can be traced

plays right to the heart of human society and
culture and as a result, right to the heart of
the law,  says Henry T. Greely;4 The law
cares about the mind.5
Even the Grand Chamber of the European
Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) finds it
beyond dispute that the fight against crime
depends to a great extent on the use of
modern    scientific  technologies   of
investigation and identification.6
Nonetheless, the use of neuroscientific
evidence in the courtrooms can be traced
back to 19407 when an EEG was first used in
an Americ n courtroom in a case involving a
defendant with epilepsy.8 By the same token,
in the criminal case of Florida v. Grady
Nelson, the defendant provided an EEG scan
as evidence of functional abnormalities in
their brain in an attempt to mitigate a death
sentence.9 Similar in practice, there is the
infamous insanity defense from the English
case law with its core in the M'Naughten
rule.10

back to ancient Egypt and ancient Greece. (Shen, The
overlooked history of neurolaw (2016))
a Shen, The overlooked history of neurolaw (2016),
p.677
9 Additionaly, there is the case of The United States of
America v Lorne Allan Semrau. Where fMRI evidence
was offered in court in a failed attempt to prove that
the defendant did not intend to defraud the mighty US
government.
10 The application of the rule requires testing that a
perpetrator does not know that their action was wrong,
as they are unable to understand the moral nature of
their actions due to cognitive disability. However,
the M'Naughten rule tends to disregard the idea that is
plausible that a perpetrator retains their cognitive
abilities to discern the morality of their actions, while
simultaneously being unable of regulating it, which
has proved to be rather problematic in courts.

www.supremoamicus.org

PIF 6.242

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most