FACTOID # 92: One in every three Australians is a victim of crime.
 
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Encyclopedia > Criminally insane

Criminally insane refers to a legal standard in most countries, where the motive for murder or grievous bodily harm is insanity. People considered to be criminally insane cannot differentiate between right and wrong, and enjoy violent actions. Criminal insanity has long been portrayed in movies and books as the primary motive for violent acts, despite the majority of murders being committed as acts of frustration rather than pleasure. The movie stereotype is based on a person who revels in violence making a more convincing or entertaining villain than one who commits murder out of frustration and stress. It has been suggested that Sanity be merged into this article or section. ...


The "criminally insane", as portrayed in fiction, would much rather harm others. They will, it is understood, quickly resort to murder as a strategy of conflict resolution - the messier the better. They don't understand the rules of either straight society or of criminal subcultures and are thus doubly shunned, and paradoxically free. Even when institutionalized, they laugh at their captors and plan bloody vengeance. They invariably act alone, unless the force of a communal religious delusion is strong enough to engender a group hallucination. Even their utterances, tinged with brilliance and dark poetry, are obscene, and it is understood that if caught they must be quarantined forever because their disquieting, pregnant-with-menace torpor is dangerously infectious. Conflict resolution or Conflictology is the process of resolving a dispute or a conflict, by providing each sides needs, and adequately addressing their interests so that they are satisfied with the outcome. ... A psychiatric hospital (also called a mental hospital or asylum) is a hospital specializing in the treatment of persons with mental illness. ... A hallucination is a sensory perception experienced in the absence of an external stimulus, as distinct from an illusion, which is a misperception of an external stimulus. ... Quarantine, a medical term (from Italian: quaranta giorni, forty days) is the act of keeping people or animals separated for a period of time before, for instance, allowing them to enter another country. ...


Some people, such as a number of mental health organizations, contend that this classic stereotype of criminal insanity is incorrect. Whereas persons with schizophrenia or psychosis are more likely to commit murder, they contend that the stereotype is far removed from fact, and fight to prevent negative stereotypes in popular media. This article is about the mental state. ...


See also

i dont believe this is true! It has been suggested that Sanity be merged into this article or section. ...


External link

  • Information on the links between mental illness and violence

  Results from FactBites:
 
Criminally insane - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (309 words)
Criminally insane refers to a legal standard in most countries, where the motive for murder or grievous bodily harm is insanity.
Criminal insanity has long been portrayed in movies and books as the primary motive for violent acts, despite the majority of murders being committed as acts of frustration rather than pleasure.
They don't understand the rules of either straight society or of criminal subcultures and are thus doubly shunned, and paradoxically free.
Arkham Asylum - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1885 words)
Arkham Asylum for the Criminally Insane is a mental hospital that appears in the fictional DC Universe.
Originally, Arkham Asylum was used only to house genuinely insane characters - the Joker and Two-Face were inmates from its very first appearance - but over the course of the 1980s a trend was established of having the majority of Batman's supervillain opponents end up at Arkham, whether or not they were actually insane.
Even a former Arkham employee is now an inmate; psychiatrist Dr. Harleen Quinzel went insane and turned to crime, as the loony Harley Quinn, after the Joker, then her patient, seduced her and enlisted her as his sidekick.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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