The Anatomy of Violence: The Biological Roots of Crime

· Penguin Random House Audio · Narrated by Jonathan Cowley
4.2
5 reviews
Audiobook
16 hr 24 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

With a 4-page full-color insert, and black-and-white illustrations throughout

Why do some innocent kids grow up to become cold-blooded serial killers? Is bad biology partly to blame? For more than three decades Adrian Raine has been researching the biological roots of violence and establishing neurocriminology, a new field that applies neuroscience techniques to investigate the causes and cures of crime. In The Anatomy of Violence, Raine dissects the criminal mind with a fascinating, readable, and far-reaching scientific journey into the body of evidence that reveals the brain to be a key culprit in crime causation.
 
Raine documents from genetic research that the seeds of sin are sown early in life, giving rise to abnormal physiological functioning that cultivates crime. Drawing on classical case studies of well-known killers in history—including Richard Speck, Ted Kaczynski, and Henry Lee Lucas—Raine illustrates how impairments to brain areas controlling our ability to experience fear, make good decisions, and feel guilt predispose us to violence. He contends that killers can actually be coldhearted: something as simple as a low resting heart rate can give rise to violence. But arguing that biology is not destiny, he also sketches out provocative new biosocial treatment approaches that can change the brain and prevent violence.
 
Finally, Raine tackles the thorny legal and ethical dilemmas posed by his research, visualizing a futuristic brave new world where our increasing ability to identify violent offenders early in life might shape crime-prevention policies, for good and bad. Will we sacrifice our notions of privacy and civil rights to identify children as potential killers in the hopes of helping both offenders and victims? How should we punish individuals with little to no control over their violent behavior? And should parenting require a license? The Anatomy of Violence offers a revolutionary appraisal of our understanding of criminal offending, while also raising provocative questions that challenge our core human values of free will, responsibility, and punishment.

Ratings and reviews

4.2
5 reviews
Kathleen Hannah
May 12, 2021
Why does this type of book continue to be published after literally centuries of debate? Shouldn't phrenology have put an end to it? This book is mostly about bad evolutionary psychology ("Men are warriors; women are worriers"), plus genetic studies that can't prove anything because they don't look at noncriminal individuals. Except when they do and find a whole lot of normal people who have no inkling of criminality despite possessing the same gene. Knowing that people will read this anyway, I recommend learning more about why the nature nurture dichotomy has been rejected by most modern thinkers, and looking up how many murders actually exhibit psychopathic tendencies (hint: it's less than you think
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About the author

ADRIAN RAINE is the Richard Perry University Professor in the departments of Criminology, Psychiatry, and Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania. For the past thirty-five years, his research has focused on the neurobiological and biosocial bases of antisocial and violent behavior, and ways to prevent and treat it in both children and adults.

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