1. Law and neuroscience: historical context / Nicole A. Vincent
2. Criminal common law compatibilism / Stephen J. Morse
3. What can neurosciences say about responsibility?: taking the distinction between theoretical and practical reason seriously / Anne Ruth Mackor
4. Irrationality, mental capacities, and neuroscience / Jillian Craigie and Alicia Coram
5. Skepticism concerning human agency: sciences of the self versus "voluntariness" in the law / Paul Sheldon Davies
6. The implications of heuristics and biases research on moral and legal responsibility: a case against the reasonable person standard / Leora Dahan-Katz
7. Moral responsibility and consciousness: two challenges, one solution / Neil Levy
8. Translating scientific evidence into the language of the "folk": executive function as capacity-responsibility / Katrina L. Sifferd
9. Neuroscience, deviant appetites, and the criminal law / Colin Gavaghan
10. Is psychopathy a mental disease? / Thomas Nadelhoffer and Walter P. Sinnott-Armstrong
11. Addiction, choice, and disease: how voluntary is voluntary action in addiction? / Jeanette Kennett
12. How may neuroscience affect the way that the criminal courts deal with addicted offenders? / Wayne Hall and Adrian Carter
13. Enhancing responsibility / Nicole A. Vincent
14. Guilty minds in washed brains?: manipulation cases, and the limits of neuroscientific excuses in iberal legal orders / Christoph Bublitz and Reinhard Merkel.
Neuroscience and legal responsibility. ISBN 9780199925605. Published by Oxford University Press in 2013. Publication and catalogue information, links to buy online and reader comments.