Rehearsal of Human Criminal Behavior

in #steemstem5 years ago (edited)

Ulises Flores
01/10/2019

¡Greetings dear stem-reader!

This is a modified text from an essay on criminology, where I describe aspects of human criminal behavior as pathology. The post is structured with didactic resources, brief contextualization where the pluridisciplinary approach that has contributed to this scientific discipline is outlined, the evolutionary process as a science itself, some identification methods to establish criminal responsibility and sanction; also, the scientific discursive contrast where criminological science begins to form, ends with the conclusions of the study.

General Context

While it is difficult to determine how old Cain was when he murdered his brother Abel, it is more complex to understand how the events occurred. What are the reasons for the deviant action? Did the perpetrator think about the consequences? What factors influenced the criminal action?

Depending on the angle and perspective in which it is analyzed, there are many questions about a criminal personality. However, what we do have in reference is that it was the first human being who kills another individual. Thus, the criminal record of humanity is opened with the fratricide against Abel.

Attribution: Vilius Alvydas Bulotas Public domain image, hosted at Pixabay.com Cain became the world's first assassin by killing his brother Abel on the slopes of Mount Qasiun, north of Damascus, Syrian territory.

Later on, the biblical account describes that God with his omnipresent quality establishes responsibility for the fact and censors the conduct of the offender by imposing the respective punishment. This divine verdict would mark the beginning of the rejection of all violent and criminal conduct in humanity.

Multidisciplinary approach

On the basis of the foregoing, historical, cultural, social, axiological and spiritual, criminal conduct is rejected; hence the existence of a legislative scaffolding that has at its disposal mechanisms and instruments to establish typicity (action described in the law), anti-juricity (action or omission contrary to the law) and culpability to establish whether or not to sanction.

For almost a century, in the path of due process, the contribution of science has become more and more relevant. Multidisciplinary taxation integrates approaches such as anthropology, biology, medicine, neurophysiology, endocrinology, genetics, biochemistry, ethology, psychology, sociology and other scientific specialties underlying the study of individuals' antisocial behaviors.

The evolution of criminology

The epistemological weight of the historical tradition of early violent behavior is not fortuitous, physical anthropology took the first steps to be configured as social anthropology and took shape to become criminal anthropology, which under the influence of biological positivism is called criminological anthropology. In this way, criminology originates and evolves, a branch of science in charge of studying the biosycho-social factors of criminality.

According to the circumstances and phenomenological aspects, the social and structural causes of the facts derived from delinquent behaviour were studied from scientific approaches in which it was believed that the delinquent person was a species of human being different from Homo sapiens and that this abnormal genus could be the missing link that has been so much sought in the evolutionary chain of man.


Route of criminological science

In fact, the most positivist currents of medicine and biology made considerable efforts to try to obtain results that would lead them to demonstrate and explain that criminal actions have their cause in organic anomalies. Specialists with extensive experience in criminal psychology such as Soria Verde Miguel A. and Dolores Sáiz Roca (2005) have carried out several studies on the subject and agree that criminal behaviour has its origin in the genetic constitution. Let us review the following representative diagram with some evaluative elements according to the scientific fields.


Own diagramming

Evolution of the identification method

The etiological understanding of human criminal behavior has solid theoretical, experimental and interdisciplinary consensus bases that have been structured for centuries; the cultural and traditional registers of regions and localities in historical times are worthy of mention to understand the scientific evolution of this process.

Attribution: Diomede CC BY-SA 3.0 image, hosted at commons.wikimedia.org

Thus, a tribe on the immense island of New Guinea is known for its ancestral practice of establishing criminal responsibility in the event of a homicide. The method of carrying out the vigil of the deceased in public place and placing in his mouth (lips) a nut of betel fruit (Areca catechu), a robust tree of the family Arecaceae (palm tree) that can surpass 30 meters in height. The truth is that drupa contains powerful metabolites with hallucinogenic, medicinal and therapeutic properties, among others.

Since this plant was considered a sacred panacea by the community, it was believed that the corpse would spit out the walnut if the perpetrator was present. In this sense, the person responsible for the act avoids attending and in his attempt to evade justice, he ends up being pointed out and the list of suspects is reduced, since the psychological impact of guilt and fear of being discovered frightens the perpetrator.

Attribution: Gerd Altmann Public domain image, hosted at Pixabay.com Depending on the method used to identify or know a person, there can be high margins of error in the final result.


Of course, the method of announcing the collection of DNA samples when an assassination of an influential person in society occurred is also close to the outlandish previous method. And it is that the practice of pointing out without conclusive evidentiary elements dates from primitive civilization, has its passage through the Babylonian, Mesopotamian, Macedonian, Greek, Roman empires and extends through colonial and modern monarchies, in these the abominable methods of the Holy Inquisition of the Catholic Church and other conventional systems to the present day.

Consequently, this evolutionary journey is perceived that from any time societies have been concerned with creating methods that allow them to identify the person responsible for a crime, thus, judge and punish the misconduct. Other factors deriving from the above were social, moral, religious, cultural, racial and physiognomic aspects. For example, the population of color in racist and affluent societies generally presents relevant statistical indices. In many cases having a certain physical appearance or dressing in a certain way is enough to be suspicious or pointed out...

Scientific Discussion

A set of approaches with argumentative rigor and scientific basis are found in the studies of Giovanni Battista della Porta (1535 - 1615), this Italian researcher developed a series of experiments to determine the qualities of people by observing their aptitudinal bodily attributes. He was followed by Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741-1801) who made more inclined contributions to physical traits:

The art of knowing men through physiognomy (1775-1778) that with its description of men of natural evil "oblique nose in relation to the face, small deformed face and saffron color", we will probably find the clearest inspiration of the profile of the "born criminal".... Source

Attribution: Gerd Altmann Public domain image, hosted at Pixabay.com Multidisciplinary discussion among researchers for consensus on the methods, procedures and results obtained.


These postulates would take shape and generate various theories, including phrenology, which stated that according to certain outstanding areas (relief) in the brain, it was thought that they had certain conduct and mental body competitions. In this way, it was inferred that a person would have x instincts and therefore good or bad behavior.

One of the pioneers and main defender of this theory was the German doctor Franz Gall (1758-1828), argued that each brain zone has certain mental faculties and that the morphology of this organ determines the volume of its mass; among the stimuli - thoughts that he described counts caution, cunning, vanity.... He wrote practically the first text with scientific rigor in criminal psychology.

Displaced the era of phrenology and physiognomy that had a certain proximity with the rough pseudoscientific methods treated in previous paragraphs; at the end of the XIX century the criminological field takes a leap with the approach of systematic and experimental observation of the scientific method. Cesare Lombroso, this anthropologist of Italian origin, revolutionized with conclusive studies and research with scientists from other branches, concluding on the pre-existence of a biological factor with special characteristics that leads a person to emerge his criminal behavior.

Attribution: Gerd Altmann Public domain image, hosted at Pixabay.com Throughout this process and multidisciplinary gear, science has advanced with the maturation of criminology as a criminal specialty that studies crime, victim, victimizer and environment.


This author does not diminish the importance of the multifactorial elements of environmental, social, cultural order, among others. And it is that its base was based on works in situ where it carefully evaluated 66 skulls of deceased delinquents who had gained police and judicial renown for their extensive files. Not satisfied with the results, it continues with anthropometric and physiognomic observations of 832 other individuals with similar criminal profiles. In summary, he will infer that there are six types of criminals, all of pathological origin.

Conclusions

The evolution of the criminological sciences, today called criminology, has an epistemological, experimental and socio-cultural flow that reveals the human instinct to discover, identify, judge, sanction and prevent about perpetrators and victims, about ideas and systematization, between facts and results, as well as knowledge for the administration of justice.

If logic, reason, morals, customs, society and culture manifest that criminal behavior is the product of learned voluntary behaviors, an emerging science is deepening studies to reveal the real origin of criminal behavior. From the perspective of the father of criminology, all criminal behavior is due to a biogenetic anomaly reinforced by multifactorial factors. In successive postures, the subject matter of study and discussion will be expanded and detailed.

▂▃▅▆▇█ References █▇▆▅▃▂

  1. Criminal behavior, a psychological perspective Link
  2. Criminal profiles, a tour of the dark side of the human being Link
  3. Criminal Psychology Link
  4. Soria Verde Miguel A. and Dolores Sáiz Roca (2005) Criminal Psychology Link

Resources

The author (@ulisesfl17) made the conceptual map with Mindjet MindManager 2018.


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I was kind of amused to start your very interesting post with a tale (yes, I personally do not buy the Cain and Abel story).

On a more serious matter, I am quite convinced the environment in which anyone evolves plays a big role. I am quite convinced that someone with some "born-killer" aptitudes could end as a nicely-behaving human if evolving in an appropriate environment, and vice versa: someone could get crazy if he is surrounded by the wrong people. Of course, I have nothing to back up my naive thoughts. I however find it weird that in your post, everything is reduced to biological factors.

Somehow, I tend to agree with @abigail-dantes :)

Hey @lemouth,

I think you're right about that, because here, too, you can draw on science and say that "unhealthy behaviour" of living beings most likely will become "healthy behaviour" when the framework in which they move is changed. Create an environment that is good for coexistence and culture and the participants in the system adapt. Create a difficult, mono-environment where strict survival seems to be at stake and you also have participants adapted to that environment. Even genes adapt to their environment - is what I have read somewhere - and are not "static". Everything is an interplay of multiple factors and this interplay is so complex that mono-causality is no longer an option in the latest sciences anyway.

Thanks for agreeing with my guesses (which sounds quite logical to me, but human logics is not science :) ).

I think one does not exclude the other :) For example, a fisher man living all his life at the shore does not use data (quantitative scientific evidence) to make his decisions but his experience with the weather and the sea. So we people use our life experience where we may have known a person changing "from Saulus to Paulus", readjusting his lifestyle from a former criminal to a non criminal.

I agree with this. This is clearly a combination of different parameters and which one dominates is probably also an individual-dependent statement :)

Hello @lemouth.

The first or second paragraph of the thematic introduction to my publications, generally I do some mythological, legendary, historical story or that is sprinkled of humorous interest. However, I clarify the context and frame the differentiation between the previous plane and scientific arenas.

The field of criminology is so extensive that being interdisciplinary it lacks integration of other sciences to obtain more effective results. Hence it is said to be a young science that will never age because it is constantly evolving and progressing. Meanwhile, this essay is a fragment of an academic work that I share in the form of a post. In it I subjectively make some considerations according to the specialized literature that I have reviewed.

From my own experience and also from documentary references, I know that external factors, being precisely sociology the one in charge of the study of multiple social and environmental factors that are generally linked to criminal behavior.
Between disciplines such as criminal psychology and sociology are precisely in charge of studying this type of behavior in order to establish causal analysis that allows following a corrective treatment. However, to deal with such a complex and at the same time controversial topic from an interdisciplinary point of view in an expansive way in a single article is extremely ambitious. I have not yet reached that synthetic capacity.

However, it helps me to better understand the structuring of the title and the scope or delimitation of the post. I only made reference that the topic will continue, but I did not make it clear that in its content I gather the contributions of the positivist school and particularly of Cesare Lombroso.

Your valuable comments are important to improve my ability to write articles with scientific input. So I appreciate those details that contribute to my growth as a writer.

The first or second paragraph of the thematic introduction to my publications, generally I do some mythological, legendary, historical story or that is sprinkled of humorous interest. However, I clarify the context and frame the differentiation between the previous plane and scientific arenas.

Oh I didn't know that. I think that it is the first time I read something from you (at least as I remember).

From my own experience and also from documentary references, I know that external factors, being precisely sociology the one in charge of the study of multiple social and environmental factors that are generally linked to criminal behavior [...]

Ah I understand now. Therefore, I guess I will need to wait a little bit before you start discussing my points. That's fair enough, as I am a patient person :D

I am thus looking forward to the next episode!



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Greetings. Thank you for the valuable recognition and support given to my blog.

Hi Ulises,

I am refering to this paragraph of yours:

In fact, the most positivist currents of medicine and biology made considerable efforts to try to obtain results that would lead them to demonstrate and explain that criminal actions have their cause in organic anomalies. Specialists with extensive experience in criminal psychology such as Soria Verde Miguel A. and Dolores Sáiz Roca (2005) have carried out several studies on the subject and agree that criminal behaviour has its origin in the genetic constitution.

I think the latest science is beyond the point of giving a monocausal hypothesis for anything, be it psychological or physiological. Since I cannot read your sources, I assume that the phrase "that considerable efforts have been made" to do research, the result of which is already determined, does not correspond to the real purpose of research. In the strictest sense, research is always open-ended. Anyone who hopes for a result that already in his mind tends towards one side will always manipulate his own research.

I assume that it is a formulation chosen by you and I interpret your wish that the result should be such that criminal behaviour has its origin in the genetic constitution. Do I see that correctly?

If so, would my question be, why is this result important to you?

Another question would be, put the case, this result would prevail: what would be the consequence then? An intervention in the genome?

For my part, I question whether a biologistic view or discipline that seems so far advanced, as you suggest here, is actually interested in inter-faculty collaboration or whether it is rather a field of research of its own working for itself. "Interdiscipline" is a popular buzzword today, but as far as I can tell, it is rarely used in practice.

Please name concrete research teams or research projects that work interdisciplinary with other teams not working in their own field. Where, for example, are sociologists, biologists, psychologists and others active as a designated, named team discussing and documenting their work as an open end question?

With whom do the scientists named by you who come from another discipline work together?

At present, we have clearly separated the biological, psychological, social and criminal treatment of offenders. If a research team were interested in interdisciplinarity, for example, the topic would be "Interdisciplinary research in the criminological environment", but not "agreement that criminal behaviour has its origin in the genetic constitution."

Please see my comment not as personal, as I don't know you but I am concerned about a perceived overhang which points towards a comeback of biologistical views. I may be wrong on that.

Hi @erh.germany. My name is Ulysses. I'm from Venezuela.

Delighted of your participation and interest in the content of this post. As well, it has been pointed out by the users (@abigail-dantes and @lemouth), as well as the introduction, development and considerations of this post, is a complex problem of multifactorial order. Now, the content corresponds to an academic work that I did in compliance with an activity in the subject of criminology of the law faculty. Being of an academic nature and where I took the liberty of reviewing the sources cited, most of them positivist, the analytical interpretation has a considerable subjective burden.

Numerous studies have attempted to search for and relate the crime and the criminal behaviour of the offender with a genetic explanation of a hereditary nature; although there are other components under study. There are theories that support the transmission of behavioral elements such as aggressiveness, excitability, violence, etc. In order to support their thesis, the followers of this trend have based themselves on three basic types of studies: genealogical, statistical and biological. In the latter, they are advancing with research related to the karyotype. Source

In future publications, I will be more careful to structure the title and specify the scope of the post's objective.

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