El impacto de la tecnologia en la juventud
Cesare Lombroso, a high-minded 19th century Italian physician, is remembered for his seriesof skull measurements purporting to show that criminals have smaller brains than law-abiding citizens. Few criminology textbooks go to print without elaborate coverage of Lombroso's folly, a reminderto students that nurture, not nature, is responsible for criminal behavior. Now, however, two prominent Harvard professors, James Q. Wilson and Richard Herrnstein, argue that Lombroso was on theright track: no one is born a criminal, but many are born with "constitutional factors" that predispose them to serious crime.Read more:http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,960148,00.html#ixzz150gr6Ajl
Are People Born Criminals ?
Cesare Lombroso, a high-minded 19th century italian physician,is remembered for his series of skull measurements purporting to show that criminals havesmaller brains than law-abiding citizens.Few criminology textbooks go to print without elaborate coverage of Lombroso's folly,a reminder of students that nurture,not nature,is responsible for criminalbehavior.I agree with that that last phrase nurture not nature is responsible for criminal behavior.Why ? Because is simple,when a person is born it is unaware about the things that apply his five...
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