Accommodation without Exculpation? The Ethical and Legal Paradoxes of Borderline Personality Disorder

D. Sisti, A. Caplan
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a complex mental disorder that straddles the line between psychosis and neurosis. As such, questions about the moral and legal responsibility of persons with BPD are especially vexing. Persons suffering with borderline personality disorder typically are impulsive and suffer from impaired volition. They also lack a stable sense of self. Nonetheless, persons with borderline personality disorder often hold long-term, stable preferences—often related to discontinuing particular problematic behaviors—and have a degree of capacity that we argue creates prima facie conditions for holding them ethically and legally responsible. However, this limited capacity often falls short in smoothly accommodating day-to-day relationships. We argue that while a certain degree of accommodation is appropriate for persons with BPD, the diagnosis of BPD does not by itself provide sufficient grounds for voiding responsibility for criminal acts. Using a hierarchical theory of autonomy recognizing first- and second-order volition, we propose a sliding scale be used to ascertain the degree to which a person with BPD should be exculpated weighing the graveness of the act against an estimation of the congruence of second- and first-order volitions.
没有辩解的迁就?边缘型人格障碍的伦理和法律悖论
边缘型人格障碍(BPD)是一种介于精神病和神经症之间的复杂精神障碍。因此,关于BPD患者的道德和法律责任的问题尤其令人烦恼。患有边缘型人格障碍的人通常是冲动的,意志受损。他们也缺乏稳定的自我意识。尽管如此,患有边缘性人格障碍的人通常有长期稳定的偏好——通常与停止特定的问题行为有关——并且有一定程度的能力,我们认为这为他们在道德和法律上承担责任创造了初步条件。然而,这种有限的能力往往不足以顺利地适应日常关系。我们认为,虽然对BPD患者有一定程度的迁就是适当的,但BPD的诊断本身并不能提供充分的理由来免除对犯罪行为的责任。使用识别一阶和二阶意志的层次自治理论,我们提出了一个滑动尺度,用于确定BPD患者应该被赦免的程度,权衡行为的严重性与二阶和一阶意志的一致性估计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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