And that's enough..? Enough for what, friendo?4li3n said:About the same way they determine legal insanity i would assume... and that only works as a defense in very few cases.SuperChurl said:It would set a very dangerous precedent. How often would we see memory loss appear as a defence? How much time and taxpayer money do we spend sorting the amnesiacs from the fakers--and how do we actually determine, with legal weight, that someone actually has amnesia to the extent that we will forget their past actions? And where do we draw the line; if someone was drunk or high enough to claim no memory of events, we'd still convict them if the evidence was there, wouldn't we?
Also, isn't actual permanent retrograde amnesia pretty darn rare outside of works of fiction?
And it doesn't matter how rare permanent retrograde amnesia is, it could happen, and that's enough.
Really, though, in a legal situation, how much distinction do we make between people who can't remember their crimes because of retrograde amnesia versus people who can't remember their crimes because they were super drunk at the time?