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Modern law was built on the assumption that individuals consciously choose their actions. Neuroscience has complicated that foundation by demonstrating how trauma, neural damage, and unconscious processing shape behavior before conscious awareness fully emerges. The courtroom now confronts questions once confined to philosophy. This account explores the collision between neuroscience and legal responsibility in the twenty-first century. Studies of traumatic brain injury, impulse regulation, and decision-making increasingly challenge older ideas of autonomous free will. Brain imaging technologies reveal how neurological abnormalities can alter aggression, empathy, memory, and moral judgment in ways difficult to reconcile with traditional criminal punishment. The book also examines the philosophical debate surrounding consciousness itself. Materialist theories argue that awareness emerges from physical computation within neural systems rather than from any nonmaterial mind. If human choices arise from biological mechanisms shaped by genetics and environment, modern justice systems may require fundamental reconsideration. Beyond criminal law, these discoveries carry major implications for medical ethics and long-term care. Patients with severe brain trauma now occupy uncertain territory between consciousness, reflex, and identity. Neuroscience therefore forces societies to reconsider not only guilt and responsibility, but what qualifies as a person at all.
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Liczba stron: 213
Rok wydania: 2026
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