The factors of the unsound mind, with special reference to the plea of insanity in criminal cases, Utgave 371 |
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Side vi
... emotion ... Homicidal , classed , of persecution from cerebral disorder or disease 211 125 ... 75 103 ... 157 211 ... 159 7 199 200 107 89 96 156 91 93 95 205 44 53 54 52 222 555 39 ... " " from bodily sensations 48 from loss of ...
... emotion ... Homicidal , classed , of persecution from cerebral disorder or disease 211 125 ... 75 103 ... 157 211 ... 159 7 199 200 107 89 96 156 91 93 95 205 44 53 54 52 222 555 39 ... " " from bodily sensations 48 from loss of ...
Side vii
... Emotions , The " " 99 Epilepsy " " 99 ... ... Religious ... ... and passions , excited , Inferences from ... ... a scrofulous affection ... functional and organic and illusions ... : vii PAGE 58 61 62 82 121 125 158 105 106 106 ... 160 ...
... Emotions , The " " 99 Epilepsy " " 99 ... ... Religious ... ... and passions , excited , Inferences from ... ... a scrofulous affection ... functional and organic and illusions ... : vii PAGE 58 61 62 82 121 125 158 105 106 106 ... 160 ...
Side x
... emotions PAGE 178 50 32 99 ... 125 126 ... 125 , 136 226 ... ... 99 mania ... 99 99 Cases of ... Resistance to insane impulse , its measure Right and wrong , Knowledge of , put to the test Scurvy and insanity ... Sensation , A ...
... emotions PAGE 178 50 32 99 ... 125 126 ... 125 , 136 226 ... ... 99 mania ... 99 99 Cases of ... Resistance to insane impulse , its measure Right and wrong , Knowledge of , put to the test Scurvy and insanity ... Sensation , A ...
Side xx
... Emotions , Passions , and Movements of the Will . A section will also be devoted to mixed cases from causes of common occurrence ; and a final chapter to a case of Religious Mania in which these leading factors of the unsound mind will ...
... Emotions , Passions , and Movements of the Will . A section will also be devoted to mixed cases from causes of common occurrence ; and a final chapter to a case of Religious Mania in which these leading factors of the unsound mind will ...
Side 12
... emotions call up the image of a known person ; and of that class , too , in which a derangement of the cerebral circulation ( inducing a fit , and followed by a feverish condition ) goes far to explain the phenomenon . This case , in ...
... emotions call up the image of a known person ; and of that class , too , in which a derangement of the cerebral circulation ( inducing a fit , and followed by a feverish condition ) goes far to explain the phenomenon . This case , in ...
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The Factors of the Unsound Mind, with Special Reference to the Plea of ... William Augustus Guy Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2016 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
action affections asylum attack authority believe Bellingham bodily brain catalepsy causes cerebral circulation character chorea committed the act convulsions crime curious dæmons delirium delusion disease disorders dreams emotions and passions epilepsy executions expression fact factors faculty febrile fever figures gentleman George Baker give Griesinger ground of insanity homicidal acts hysteria Illusions and Delusions Illusive Transformations illustration Imagination imbecile Impulsive Insanity inferences involuntary JAMES COWLES PRICHARD JOHN ALDERSON John Clare kill lady Lord Onslow lunatic M'Naughten madman madness mania memory mental merism Millbank Monomania movements natural nervous night object observed occurred offence organs of sense pain passed patient persons phantom physician Plea of Insanity POCKET GUIDE present Prichard prisoner proved question of Criminal quoted reason recognise religious sensations sleep Smollett somnambulism somnambulist speaking strange symptoms thought unreal unsound mind victim violent waking witness words
Populære avsnitt
Side 214 - ... to establish a defence on the ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that, at the time of the committing of the act, the party accused was labouring under such a defect of reason, from disease of the mind, as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing; or, if he did know it, that he did not know he was doing what was wrong.
Side 205 - ... have not only had the most perfect knowledge and recollection of all the relations they stood in towards others, and of the acts and circumstances of their lives, but have, in general, been remarkable for subtlety and acuteness.
Side 211 - Every person was supposed to know what the law was, and therefore nothing could justify a wrong act, except it was clearly proved that the party did not know right from wrong.
Side 191 - ... casuistry, consciousness must enter into the constitution of guilt, the consequences of murder committed by a maniac may be as pernicious to society as those of the most criminal and deliberate assassination : and the punishment of death can be hardly deemed unjust or rigorous, when inflicted upon a mischievous being, divested of all the perceptions of reason and humanity.
Side 204 - ... totally deprived of his understanding and memory, and doth not know what he is doing, no more than an infant, than a brute, or a wild beast...
Side 75 - When the next delirious paroxysm came on, she would continue the conversation which she had been pursuing in her preceding paroxysm ; so that she appeared as a person might be supposed to do who had two souls, each occasionally dormant and occasionally active, and utterly ignorant of what the other was doing.
Side 53 - One case, that of the gentleman of Argos, whose delusion led him to suppose, that he was attending the representation of a play, as he sat in his bedchamber, is so exact, that I saw a person of exalted rank, under those very circumstances of delusion, and heard him call upon Mr Garrick to exert himself, in the performance of Hamlet.
Side 210 - That before a plea of insanity should be allowed, undoubted evidence ought to be adduced that the accused was of diseased mind, and that at the time he committed the act he was not conscious of right or wrong.
Side 212 - A person labouring under specific delusions, but in other respects sane, shall not be acquitted on the ground of insanity, under the provisions hereinafter contained, unless the delusions caused him to believe in the existence of some state of things which, if it existed, would justify or excuse his act or omission.
Side 207 - There was a third species of insanity, in which the patient fancied the existence of injury and sought an opportunity of gratifying revenge by some hostile act. If such a person was capable, in other respects, of distinguishing right from wrong, there was no excuse for any act of atrocity which he might commit under this description of derangement.