F
fakename
Guest
Morally, is the current way we conduct trials good or bad?
The recent Casey Anthony case has got me thinking about trials in general. Are there drawbacks to the way a case is argued under common law than in roman law?
And more specifically, do you think we should have double jeopardy -I mean what if you make didn’t test evidence that could have been tested which was relevant to the issue?
And a question about reasonable doubt which I’ve had for a long time -is reasonable doubt to wide a parameter? I think we should apply the total of human reason to solving crimes so we should shoot for using nothing short of geometric proof in constructing court cases. Therefore reasonable doubt should be discarded in favor of “logical contradiction”. If you can’t show that a case isn’t true, by showing that it leads to a contradiction, then you can’t say that anyone is guilty or innocent.
There are some problems of course with what I wrote but I want to here other’s ideas.
The recent Casey Anthony case has got me thinking about trials in general. Are there drawbacks to the way a case is argued under common law than in roman law?
And more specifically, do you think we should have double jeopardy -I mean what if you make didn’t test evidence that could have been tested which was relevant to the issue?
And a question about reasonable doubt which I’ve had for a long time -is reasonable doubt to wide a parameter? I think we should apply the total of human reason to solving crimes so we should shoot for using nothing short of geometric proof in constructing court cases. Therefore reasonable doubt should be discarded in favor of “logical contradiction”. If you can’t show that a case isn’t true, by showing that it leads to a contradiction, then you can’t say that anyone is guilty or innocent.
There are some problems of course with what I wrote but I want to here other’s ideas.