Criminal Psychology : a Manual for Judges, Practitioners, And Students
The book Criminal Psychology : a Manual for Judges, Practitioners, And Students was written by author Hans Gross Here you can read free online of Criminal Psychology : a Manual for Judges, Practitioners, And Students book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Criminal Psychology : a Manual for Judges, Practitioners, And Students a good or bad book?
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Angell, Psychology. 188 CRIMINAL PSYCHOLOGY [§36 The importance of sense-perception need not be demonstrated. " If we ask," says Mittermaier, " for the reason of our conviction of the truth of facts even in very important matters, and the basis of every judgment concerning existence of facts, we find that the evidence of the senses is final and seems, therefore, the only true source of certainty." There has always, of course, been a quarrel as to the objectivity and rehability of sense-percepti...on. That the senses do not lie, " not because they are always correct, but because they do not judge," is a frequently quoted sentence of Kant's; the Cyrenaics have already suggested this in asserting that pleasure and pain alone are indubitable. Aristotle narrows the veracity of sensation to its essential content, as does Epicurus. Descartes, Locke and Leibnitz have suggested that no image may be called, as mere change of feeling, true or false. Sensationalism in the work of Gassendi, CondUlac, and Helvetius undertook for this reason the defense of the senses against the reproach of deceit, and as a rule did it by invoking the infallibility of the sense of touch against the reproach of the contradictions in the other senses.
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