Mental Disabilities and Duty in Negligence Law: Will Neuroscience Reform Tort Doctrine?

Jean M. Eggen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Recent developments in neuroscience may contribute to some long-needed changes in negligence law. One negligence rule in need of reform is the duty rule allowing physical disabilities to be considered in determining whether a party acted negligently, but disallowing mental disabilities for adult tortfeasors. Further, this bifurcated rule applies imposes an objective standard only on adults alleged to have acted negligently. A subjective standard applies to all parties in intentional torts and to children in negligence actions. Courts justify the bifurcated rule for adults on policy grounds, but these policy underpinnings are no longer valid in contemporary society. More accurate diagnosis of mental conditions through neuroimaging, combined with a better understanding of the behavioral patterns that accompany such conditions, support the need for reform. This article looks at both tort doctrine and neuroscience and concludes that the bifurcated rule is no longer tenable in the era of neuroscience. This article’s modest proposal for understanding how neuroscience may contribute to eliminating the bifurcated rule in tort law is intended as a means to initiate a broader discourse about the potential impact of neuroscience on other aspects of tort doctrine.
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精神残疾与过失法责任:神经科学将改革侵权行为法吗?
神经科学的最新发展可能有助于过失法的一些长期需要的变化。一个需要改革的过失规则是责任规则,允许在确定当事人是否有过失行为时考虑身体残疾,但不允许对成年侵权行为人考虑精神残疾。此外,这种两面性的规则只对被指控有过失行为的成年人施加客观标准。主观标准适用于故意侵权的所有当事人和过失诉讼中的儿童。法院以政策为由为成年人的分岔规则辩护,但这些政策基础在当代社会已不再有效。通过神经成像更准确地诊断精神疾病,并更好地理解伴随这些疾病的行为模式,支持了改革的必要性。本文从侵权理论和神经科学两个方面进行了分析,认为在神经科学时代,分岔原则已不再成立。本文对理解神经科学如何有助于消除侵权法中的分岔规则提出了适度的建议,旨在作为一种手段,就神经科学对侵权原则其他方面的潜在影响展开更广泛的讨论。
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