Criminal Psychology; a manual for judges, practitioners, and students by Hans Gustav Adolf Gross
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page 22 of 828 (02%)
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medical disciplines, in spite of the fact that Regnault,[6] still later,
attempted to recover it for philosophy, as is pointed out in Friedreich's[7] well-known text-book (cf. moreover V. Wilbrand's[8] text-book). Nowadays, criminal psychology, as represented by Kraus,[9] Krafft- Ebing,[10] Maudsley,[11] Holtzendorff,[12] Lombroso,[13] and others has become a branch of criminal anthropology. It is valued as the doctrine of motives in crime, or, according to Liszt, as the investigation of the psychophysical condition of the criminal. It is thus only a part of the subject indicated by its name.[14] How utterly criminal psychology has become incorporated in criminal anthropology is demonstrated by the works of N Baer,[21] Koch,[22] Maschka,[23] Thomson,[24] Ferri,[25] Bonfigli,[26] Corre,[27] etc. [1] Johann Heinroth: Grundzuge der Kriminalpsychologie. Berlin 1833. [2] Schaumann: Ideen zu einer Kriminalpsychologie. Halle 1792. [3] M Kriminal-Rechts. N [4] Eckartshausen. Beurteilung von Verbreehern. M [5] J. Fries: Handbuch der psychologischer Anthropologie. Jena, 1820. [6] E. Regnault: Das gerichtliche Urteil der C [7] J. B. Friedreich: System der gerichtlichen Psychologie. Regensburg 1832. |
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