Over the last century, a comprehensive natural science of human behavior has developed. However, that science emerged within a human culture that, since antiquity, has been heavily invested in organized superstitious and mystical alternatives with respect to behavioral phenomena. As a result, the natural science of behavior remains largely absent from academic curricula. Few people are thus prepared to study and manage human behavior through this natural science, although doing so would lead expeditiously to solutions for seemingly intractable socio-cultural problems. From this natural science perspective, this book offers a preview of such outcomes by revisiting just one aspect of culture, namely, law and penal rehabilitation in the criminal justice system. The often-radical differences from traditional practice that emerge in this book reveal how an appropriate natural science can advance some satisfactory improvements to some long-standing cultural frustrations. (Visit www.behaviorology.org, which does not sell books, for a more detailed description including the actual Table of Contents.)