(November 22, 2017 at 12:23 pm)Rev. Rye Wrote:(November 22, 2017 at 11:25 am)Industrial Lad Wrote: To try to figure out whether he knew at the time it was wrong could be very complex. Usually when schizophrenics commit murder(and usually when they commit crimes it's crazy but petty crimes) it's because they have delusions that they or someone else is in danger.You know, I can remember a scene from Anatomy of a Murder, where Orson Bean plays a psychiatrist who comes up to the bench during a murder trial
They think it's more or less self defense.
Apparently, Manson had delusions of a race war.
The question is, did he not see it as wrong in every single case?
It's a weird thought exercise whether they were collateral damage in his mind.
Tbh I haven't studied up on him that much.
to explain that the defendant committed the murder under an "irresistible impulse." When the prosecutor asks if the defendant would have known right from wrong in that instance, he can only say ".. it would not have made any difference whether he knew right from wrong". Charlie didn't act on an irresistible impulse, but literally everything I've read about Manson (and it's been quite a lot) would suggest that statement is as good an answer as any about the state of Charlie's mind.
So was he a sociopath too? I mean it's hard to imagine him not being one, considering all the messed up things he's done. I know a little about the circumstances of his life and it was pretty messed up.