Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Definition of forensic psychology
Forensic Psychology and Psychology of Evidence.
Forensic psychology, in its updated definition, is conceptualized as a factual science derived from applied psychology, which studies human behavior defined by the laws of man and the mental processes that underlie these. Forensic psychology is the branch of psychology called to be the mother of the behavioral sciences, and for its exercise is necessary a multidisciplinary training type (*), this due to the demanding technical rigor involves all comments and interventions are rigorously evaluated and judged by others. (Oral Trial | forum | forensic)
(*) Law or criminal justice, criminology, criminology, policiología, sociology, psychology and psychopathology.
In forensic psychology favors the identification, study and analysis of behavioral patterns (customs and habits), this due to the lack of originality in the material or physical expression of human conduct and behavior in all its manifestations.
His character forces her to give factual answers as to the why, how, when, who or what kind of people are responsible for illegal behavior or specific actors (*), scenario punishable by law, dubious facts, unsolved cases technical or descriptive explanations warrant the judicial areas, police, social, political and law in general.
(*) Circumstantial, instrumental, expressive or psychopathology.
Behaviors regulated by law
For any modern forensic science, it is serious and responsible nature pronouncements consider theoretical, hypothetical or prejudicial highly unrealistic or impossible to prove, "not enough to say, think, assume or comment, you must try."
Just when it involves the fate of people and their "family systems" are not acceptable arguments, subjective propositions without evidence or plausible factual evidence, possible to observe. In the legal field, where judge and condemn human behavior and their leaders, the resolutions are and always will, whether or not white or black, innocent or guilty.
For those who consider the forensic psychology interventions must understand that the forensic psychologist is not a "opinólogo" or a confirmed hypothesis. The forensic psychologist is a data processor who is present, or that only describes the material elements or objects that exist independent of their belief system and are also possible to observe, understand and verify by anyone who requires it.
The concept of truth for the forensic psychologist is related to reality (facts), "seeing is believing or seeing to doubt." The evidence and facts are the forensic psychologist, like the pyramids are for the archaeologist, or animals with their manners and customs are for the ethologist. 100% observable or possible to infer through a linear cause and effect.
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Forensic Psychology - Forensic Psychology Forensic | 23/03/2011 2:34 by CristianAraos.com, Forensic Psychology | Santiago, RM 8320000 CL | Forensic Psychology and Behavioral Sciences | Skype: cristian-ad
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