Religion
In reply to the discussion: Religious Belief = Mental Illness: A More Venomous Response [View all]Brettongarcia
(2,262 posts)Seems a little off topic too.
But briefly, parenthetically? In some usages "criminal insanity" would seem self-contradictory. Since if something is insanity or mental illness, then some laws would therefore assert it is not criminal. Those who are insane, mentally ill, are in some modern cultures not held responsible for things that otherwise would be thought to be crimes. However? All that would be different in cultures that do not allow insanity as acquitting anyone of a crime.
In in fact, the term has historical usage, until recently, even in western societies; where there were prisons for the "criminally insane."
The Catholic Church interestingly, at times seems to support the notion that if a bad act is not deliberate, or conscious, or intended, then a person is not held responsible for it. However, there are other models of ethics that would question that. Particularly, we might argue that the person who did the bad act, should have known that it was bad; and deep down, probably did know it in fact.
So that? Most of the "insane" do not get off, in this moral code. IN this code, one can be "insane." But if you commit a crime, you are still held responsible.