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A DECADE OF BOOKS: QUOTES FROM THE CRIME TIMES LIBRARY
In recognition of the tenth anniversary of Crime
Times, we are foregoing our usual book review page and
instead offering a selection of quotes from the books
reviewed by Crime Times over the past decade:
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"The evidence for a substantial heritability for IQ is no
longer seriously in doubt. Personality has likewise been
shown to have significant genetic involvement..
Inasmuch as criminal behavior is associated with
intelligence and personality, and inasmuch as
personality and intelligence have genetic influences on
them, then it follows logically, as night follows day, that
criminal behavior has genetic ingredients."
R.J. Herrnstein in Crime, edited by James Q.
Wilson and Joan Petersilia (reviewed in
Crime Times, 1995, Vol. 1, No. 3)
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"The reality is that there are no genes for crime as such;
rather, there are genes that code for proteins and
enzymes that can influence physiological processes
which can in turn predispose an individual toward
crime."
The Psychopathology of Crime by Adrian Raine (reviewed
in
Crime Times, 1995, Vol. 1, No. 4)
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"Future research should be conducted by an
interdisciplinary team composed of a nutritionist, a
criminologist, a physician, a correctional research
specialist, and a neurophysiologist."
Diana H. Fishbein and Susan E. Pease in The
Psychobiology of Aggression, edited by Marc Hillbrand and
Nathaniel J. Pallone (reviewed in
Crime Times, 1996, Vol. 2, No. 3)
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"A psychiatrist can always fish for some underlying
problem and spot conflict in any family. But to conclude
that criminal behavior stems from obvious family
psychopathology is a mistake."
Inside the Criminal Mind by Stanton Samenow (reviewed
in
Crime Times, 1996, Vol. 2, No. 4)
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"It is only within the relatively recent past that major
technological advances in the neurosciences have made
it possible to record brain activity and later to map that
activity through technologically powerful imaging
devices. Concomitantly, an explosion of knowledge in
psychopharmacology and psychoendocrinology has
yielded new understandings of a panoply of interactions
between brain morphology and functioning,
neurochemistry, and emotional and behavioral disorder."
Tinder-Box Criminal Aggression by Nathaniel J. Pallone
and James J. Hennessy (reviewed in
Crime Times, 1997, Vol. 3, No. 1)
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"Over the years it has become increasingly clear.... that
most sentences intended to deter violent crimes ignore
the state of mind most perpetrators are in at the time of
their violent acts. In theory punishment as a deterrent
makes sense; in reality it is often irrelevant."
Guilty by Reason of Insanity by Dorothy Otnow Lewis
(reviewed in
Crime Times, 1999, Vol. 5, No. 2)
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"ADD used to be thought of as a disorder of
hyperactive boys who outgrew it before puberty. We
now know that most people with ADD do not outgrow the
symptoms of this disorder and that it frequently occurs in
girls and women. It is estimated that ADD affects
seventeen million Americans."
Change Your Brain, Change Your Life by Daniel G. Amen
(reviewed in
Crime Times, 1999, Vol. 5, No. 3)
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"Already, what we know about the biological and
chemical roots of violence, from neurotransmitter levels
to brain damage and dysfunction, represents a severe
problem for the moralist and the penologist. How free is
our will, when our internal mechanisms deny us the
concept of conscience? How should we be punished,
when our actions are in great degree beyond our
control?"
Anne Moir and David Jessel in A Mind to Crime
(reviewed in
Crime Times, 1999, Vol. 5, No. 4)
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"Although relatives and friends of an antisocial need
to think about how their behavior might influence him,
they also should realize that his disorder probably is
rooted in biological processes beyond their control.
Likewise, they should not hold themselves responsible if
treatment fails."
Bad Boys, Bad Men by Donald Black (reviewed in
Crime Times, 2001, Vol. 7, No. 1)
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"We legal professionals have deluded the public by our
silence (or worse, our ignorance) into thinking that
punishment and a base desire for revenge will somehow
stop crime. Politicians have done worse and routinely
capitalize on "toughness" by proposing long-term
imprisonment as a panacea for crime control.
Unfortunately, it is not. We can no longer ignore the
problem of a correction system that does not correct and
a justice delivery system that is not just."
Sentencing: As I See It by Judge Richard I. Nygaard
(reviewed in
Crime Times, 2001, Vol. 7, No. 2)
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"(T)here is good evidence that most behaviors,
especially in humans, are genetically complex; that is,
they are influenced by not just one gene, but by
many."
Are We Hardwired? by William Clark and Michael
Grunstein (reviewed in
Crime Times, 2001, Vol. 7, No. 4)
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"Scientists still do not have a complete understanding of
how PCBs impair neurological development in the womb
and early in life, but emerging evidence suggests that
the ability of PCBs to cause brain damage stems in part
from disruption to another component of the endocrine
system, thyroid hormones."
Our Stolen Future by Theo Colborn, Dianne Dumanoski,
and John Peterson Myers (reviewed in
Crime Times, 2002, Vol. 8, No. 4)
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"(T)he evidence is overwhelming that every aspect of our
mental lives depends entirely on physiological events in
the tissues of the brain."
The Blank Slate by Steven Pinker (reviewed in
Crime Times, 2003, Vol. 9, No. 2)
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"Strong and early evidence for the role of genetic
factors came from the observation that sociopathic and
alcoholic fathers produced a significantly higher rate of
sociopathic children (32%) than did fathers without this
diagnosis (16%)."
Biosocial Criminology by David E. Comings (reviewed
in
Crime Times, 2004, Vol. 10, No. 3)
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