Skip to content
Home » The Neuroscience of Restorative Justice: Dan Reisel (Transcript)

The Neuroscience of Restorative Justice: Dan Reisel (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Dan Reisel’s talk titled “The Neuroscience of Restorative Justice” at TED Talks 2014 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

DAN REISEL: I’d like to talk today about how we can change our brains and our society. Meet Joe. Joe’s 32 years old and a murderer. I met Joe 13 years ago on the lifer wing at Wormwood Scrubs high-security prison in London.

I’d like you to imagine this place. It looks and feels like it sounds: Wormwood Scrubs. Built at the end of the Victorian Era by the inmates themselves, it is where England’s most dangerous prisoners are kept. These individuals have committed acts of unspeakable evil.

Studying Psychopaths

And I was there to study their brains. I was part of a team of researchers from University College London, on a grant from the U.K. department of health. My task was to study a group of inmates who had been clinically diagnosed as psychopaths. That meant they were the most callous and the most aggressive of the entire prison population.

What lay at the root of their behavior? Was there a neurological cause for their condition? And if there was a neurological cause, could we find a cure? So I’d like to speak about change, and especially about emotional change.

Personal Background

Growing up, I was always intrigued by how people change. My mother, a clinical psychotherapist, would occasionally see patients at home in the evening. She would shut the door to the living room, and I imagined magical things happened in that room. At the age of five or six I would creep up in my pajamas and sit outside with my ear glued to the door.

On more than one occasion, I fell asleep and they had to push me out of the way at the end of the session.