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Category: James Holmes

Whenever a mass killing occurs, such as the recent tragedies at the movie theater in Colorado or the Sikh temple in Wisconsin, we get reams of speculation about why the killer did it. Many of the explanations, as I've written...

Whenever a mass killing occurs, such as the recent tragedies at the movie theater in Colorado or the Sikh temple in Wisconsin, we get reams of speculation about why the killer did it. Many of the explanations, as I've written here before, consist of amateur or long-distance psychiatric diagnosis, in which people who should know better attempt to diagnose people they have never met. 

Only occasionally do we see something as insightful and thought-provoking as a short post in Britain's The Independent, written by Alex Bryan, a freelance writer and student at the University of York. Bryan argues that we can get some insight into these horrific acts by looking a little further back--to Raskolnikov, the protagonist of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's ...

 

In the aftermath of Friday's movie theater shooting in Colorado (12 killed, 59 wounded), we find ourselves - as we've found ourselves far too often - wondering about the whys And for science writers - many of whom cover neuroscience, psychology, biology of behavior, one particular why....

 

In the aftermath of Friday's movie theater shooting in Colorado (12 killed, 59 wounded), we find ourselves - as we've found ourselves far too often - wondering about the whys And for science writers - many of whom cover neuroscience, psychology, biology of behavior, one particular why. Why would someone, anyone, buy four semi-automatic weapons and 6,000 rounds of ammunition for the single-minded purpose of harming people he did not know?

As Dave Cullen wrote in a The New York Times piece, Don't Jump to Conclusions About the Killer, this is tricky territory: "You have probably expressed your opinion on why he did it. You are probably wrong."

Cullen was a Denver journalist who covered the...