Pathological intoxication is a type of mental illness. Pathological intoxication, also known as idiopathic intoxication (Alcoholidiosyncraticintoxication), refers to the occurrence of significant behavioral and psychological changes in the amount of alcohol consumed that is insufficient to cause intoxication in the general population, and the sudden onset of agitation, impulsivity, rage, and aggressive or destructive behavior during or shortly after drinking, which can This can result in self-inflicted injury or injury to others. There are disturbances in consciousness, delusions, hallucinations, and fragmentary delusions during seizures. The seizure lasts for a short time, up to most hours; it often ends with a deep sleep. After waking up, there is no recollection of the seizure. The diagnosis of pathological intoxication requires that the diagnostic criteria for alcoholism be met, but the patient’s alcohol consumption is much less than that of ordinary intoxication. Crimes committed in cases of pathological intoxication are generally not criminally responsible; however, if the perpetrator knows that he or she is pathologically intoxicated and still drinks alcohol, he or she should be criminally responsible for crimes committed while intoxicated. Physiological intoxication, also known as ordinary intoxication, simple intoxication, or simply intoxication. It is usually the most common type of acute alcohol intoxication, mostly occurring after a single large amount of alcohol consumption. It is a case of excessive mental excitement or even delirium due to excessive alcohol consumption only. 1. Psychiatry and judicial psychiatry prove that the ability to recognize and control the behavior of a physically intoxicated person is only diminished, but not completely lost, and does not belong to a person without criminal responsibility. 2. The physically intoxicated person should have foreseen or even foreseen that he or she might commit a harmful act after being intoxicated, and has the subjective elements of intentional or negligent crime when committing a harmful act in an intoxicated state. 3. Intoxication is completely artificial and can be stopped. When punishing cases of crimes against intoxicated people, attention should be paid to whether the perpetrator had premeditated crimes before becoming intoxicated. The perpetrator has the mental attitude of intentionality or negligence towards intoxication, the relationship between the crime of intoxication and the consistent character of the perpetrator, and whether the crime of intoxication occurs in different situations such as office or professional activities, with different penalties of lightness and severity, so that the penalties are appropriate to the degree of responsibility of the person who committed the crime of intoxication and the degree of harm of his crime.