By way of understanding the Whitechapel Murders, one could distinguish between “motive” and “reason”. Motive may be thought of as the driving force behind a pre-meditated process to achieve a means to an end – the resolution of the person’s lingering dilemma. These situations usually involve things like jealousy or greed. A more immediate condition can be thought of as a reaction to an overpowering emotion such as rage, a shorter-term adverse response to some spontaneous situation. Reasons for murder may have more to do with a physiological or psychological condition such as schizophrenia or a brain tumor that incites the mind to engage in a criminal act rather than some pondering situation that eventually induces a criminal action. Motives and reasons may be, and typically are, combined in many serial killers.
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So what is going on in the head of the murderer 132 years ago today?
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