Dictionary Definition
diminish
Verb
1 decrease in size, extent, or range; "The amount
of homework decreased towards the end of the semester"; "The cabin
pressure fell dramatically"; "her weight fall to under a hundred
pounds"; "his voice fell to a whisper" [syn: decrease, lessen, fall] [ant: increase]
2 lessen the authority, dignity, or reputation
of; "don't belittle your colleagues" [syn: belittle]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From diminuer.Pronunciation
- /dɪˈmɪnɪʃ/, /dI"mInIS/
Verb
Derived terms
Translations
To make smaller
- Czech: zmenšit
- Finnish: pienentää
- German: vermindern, verkleinern, reduzieren, verringern
- Swedish: minska
To become smaller
- Czech: zmenšit se
- Finnish: pienentyä
- German: schrumpfen
To taper
- German: schmällern, abschwächen, verringern
To reduce a perfect or minor interval by a
semitone
Extensive Definition
In criminal
law, diminished responsibility (or diminished capacity) is a
potential defense
by excuse by which
defendants argue that
although they broke the law,
they should not be held criminally liable for doing so, as their
mental functions were "diminished" or impaired. The defence's
acceptance in American jurisdictions vary considerably. The
majority of states have adopted it by statute or case decision, and
a minority even recognise broader defences such as 'irresistible
impulse.' Some American states restrict the defence to the charge
of murder only where a successful defence will result in a
manslaughter conviction instead of murder. Until recently, the
Republic of Ireland did not accept the partial defence. The Irish
Supreme Court had rejected the existence of the defence in The
People (DPP) v Joseph O' Mahony [1984] ILRM 244. The case was
recently abrogated, however, by enactment of the Criminal Law
(Insanity) Act 2006, effective 1 June 2006. The act, in
pertinent part, specifically adopted the partial defence for the
charge of murder where a successful defence will result in a
manslaughter conviction instead of murder.
Discussion
This is an aspect of a more general insanity defense (see the M'Naghten Rules). Peter Arenella, in the Columbia Law Review (1977 p.830), stated, "the defense [of diminished responsibility]...was first recognized by Scottish common law to reduce the punishment of the partially insane." It developed from the practice of juries in the 19th century of returning verdicts of guilty with a recommendation as to mercy or mitigation of sentence to reflect any extenuating circumstances. In a series of decisions, given mainly by Lord Deas, a doctrine grew that various types of mental weakness could have the effect of reducing what would otherwise be a conviction for murder (which attracted capital punishment) to one for culpable homicide (where the courts had greater discretion in sentencing). An example of a "diminished capacity" might be extremely low intelligence. In the English case of R v Raven (1982) Crim. LR 51 a man who had a physical age of 22 years but a mental age of only 9 years was provoked by homosexual attacks and killed the attacker. His mental deficiency was not in dispute and, since a child of 9 years would not have been criminally responsible (see s50 Children and Young Persons Act 1933), and his mental responsibility for his acts was substantially impaired, manslaughter was the only realistic verdict. The rationale of the defense is that, as a precondition to punishment, the criminal law requires conduct to be voluntary. If something interferes with the capacity of the individual to choose to break the law, this should be reflected by an excuse or exculpation. The law should balance the need to be fair to the individual wrongdoer, but equally offer some protection to society from a person who may not have complete control over their behavior.The effect of the defense varies between the
jurisdictions. In
some, it will result in full excuse and therefore produce a verdict
of "not
guilty". In others, it offers only exculpation to a degree,
resulting in the substitution of a lesser offence (e.g., manslaughter instead of
murder) or a mitigated sentence.
California was
the first state in the U.S. to adopt the diminished capacity
defense, beginning with People v. Wells, 202 P.2d 53 (1949), and
People v. Gorshen, 336 P.2d 492 (1959)http://myweb.wvnet.edu/~jelkins/lawpsy04/diminished.html.
The doctrine would soon be abolished by ballot
initiative in 1982 following the negative publicity surrounding
the case of Dan White, who
had killed
George Moscone and Harvey Milk. While White's defense team did
argue successfully for a ruling of diminished capacity, resulting
in a verdict of voluntary
manslaughter rather than murder, an urban legend
that the defense had blamed White's actions on the ingestion of
sugar and junk food (the
so-called "Twinkie
defense") sprang up out of inaccurate media coverage. One
participant in the debate over diminished capacity rulings waved a
Twinkie in the air to make his point. Currently, the California
Penal Code states (2002), "The defense of
diminished capacity is hereby abolished ... there shall be no
defense of diminished capacity, diminished responsibility, or
irresistible
impulse..."
English law
- For the full page, see diminished responsibility in English law
Scottish law
During the course of the 20th century the courts began to limit the mental conditions falling within diminished responsibility. In HM Advocate v Savage (1923) JC 49 Lord Alness addressed the jury (at 51):- It is very difficult to it put in a phrase, but it has been put in this way: that there must be aberration or weakness of mind; that there must be some form of mental unsoundness; that there must be a state of mind which is bordering on, though not amounting to, insanity; that there must be a mind so affected that responsibility is diminished from full responsibility to partial responsibility. In other words, the prisoner in question must be only partially accountable for his actions. And I think one can see running through the cases that there is implied ... that there must be some form of mental disease.
- any condition brought on by the consumption of drink or drugs, and
- psychopathic personality disorder.
At present, Diminished Responsibility exists as a
statutory partial defence in most Australian jurisdictions. The
defence is only available in cases of murder and serves to reduce
the offence to manslaughter.
For a comprehensive summary, see Law Commission.
Partial Defences to Murder: Overseas Studies Consultation Paper No
173 (Appendices) http://www.lawcom.gov.uk/docs/cp173apps.pdf
Notes
References
- Boland, F, Diminished Responsibility as a Defence in Irish Law, (1995) 5 Irish Criminal Law Journal 193.
- Boland, F, Diminished Responsibility as a Defence in Irish Law: Past English Mistakes and Future Irish Directions, (1996) 5 Irish Criminal Law Journal 19.
- Butler Committee (1975) The Butler Committee on Mentally Abnormal Offenders (London: HMSO) Cmnd 6244.
- Dell, S, Diminished Responsibility Reconsidered, (1982) CLR 809.
- Griew, E, Reducing Murder to Manslaughter: Whose Job? (1986) 12 Journal of Medical Ethics 18.
- Griew, E, The Future of Diminished Responsibility, (1988) CLR 75.
- Scottish Law Commission. Discussion Paper on Insanity and Diminished Responsibility. Discussion Paper No 122. (2003) http://www.scotlawcom.gov.uk/downloads/dp122_insanity.pdf
diminish in German: Schuldunfähigkeit
diminish in Italian: Imputabilità
diminish in Dutch:
Ontoerekeningsvatbaarheid
diminish in Russian: Вменяемость
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abase,
abash, abate, abbreviate, ablate, abrade, abridge, abstract, abuse, adjust to, allay, alleviate, allow for, alter, anesthetize, appease, assuage, attemper, attenuate, bank the fire,
bate, be eaten away,
belittle, benumb, blunt, boil down, box in, bring
down, bring low, chasten, cheapen, circumscribe, clip, close, color, compress, condense, condition, confine, constrain, constrict, consume, consume away, contract, control, corrode, crop, crumble, crush, curtail, cushion, cut, cut back, cut down, damp, dampen, de-emphasize, deaden, deaden the pain, debase, decline, decrease, deduct, deflate, degrade, deliquesce, demean, deprecate, depreciate, depress, derogate, desiccate, detract, detract from, devalue, die away, die out,
discredit, dismiss, disparage, dispraise, dive, dock, downgrade, downplay, drain, draw in, drift away,
droop, drop, drop off, dry up, dull, dump, dump on, dwindle, ease, ease matters, ease off, eat
away, ebb, erode, extenuate, extract, fade, fade away, fall, fall away, fall off, file
away, flag, foment, give relief, gloss over,
go, go away, go in, hedge, hedge about, humiliate, ignore, impair, keep within bounds,
languish, lay, leach, leaven, lenify, lessen, let up, lighten, limit, lop, lower, lull, make allowance for, melt
away, mince, minify, minimize, mitigate, moderate, modify, modulate, mollify, move away, move off,
narrow, numb, obtund, pad, palliate, pare, peter out, pine, play down, plummet, plunge, poultice, pour balm into, pour
oil on, prune, pull away,
purify, put down,
qualify, recede, reduce, reduce the temperature,
refine, regulate by,
reject, relieve, remove, restrain, restrict, retire, retreat, retrench, retrocede, roll back, rub
away, run low, sag, salve, scale down, sear, season, set conditions, set down,
set limits, shorten,
shrink, shrivel, simplify, sink, slacken, slake, slow down, slur over,
smother, snape, sober, sober down, soft-pedal,
soften, soothe, stand off, step down,
stifle, straiten, stupe, subduct, subdue, subside, subtract, suppress, tail off, take away,
take down, take from, tame,
taper, taper off, temper, thin, thin out, tone down, trip up,
truncate, tune down,
underplay, varnish, vitiate, wane, waste, waste away, weaken, wear, wear away, weed, whitewash, widen the distance,
wilt, wind down, withdraw, wither, wizen, write
off