There is a distinction between commonly known truth and truth as established for legal purposes. The latter requires proof. This distinction between ordinary truth and legal truth is available to speakers as a discursive resource (although differently available in different cultures). In this paper, after a brief discussion of some matters relating to evidence, proof, and truth, I analyze a short, generic story told by a lawyer in the Federal Trade Commission, in which the representatives of companies allegedly violating the law say ‘‘You can’t prove it.’’ The violation is relatively minor and there is some controversy about whether to include the charge in the case. The story, I argue, provides a motivation which goes beyond the strictly l...
This Symposium on Truth and Its Rivals seems most concerned with what one might think of as the ou...
This essay is an accessible introduction to the proof paradox in legal epistemology. ...
The word evidence ordinarily means the statements, events, items, or sensory perceptions that sugges...
This book addresses the issue of legal truth. Such an issue is two folded. On the one hand, there is...
The trial of an issue of fact is an epistemic, a logical, and a legal affair. In its epistemic aspec...
This paper presents four key results. Firstly, it distinguishes between _partial_ and _consistent_ a...
The distinction between questions of law and questions of fact is deceptively complex. Although any ...
Truth is a fundamental objective of adjudicative processes; ideally, ‘substantive’ as distinct from ...
How does one prove the law? If your neighbor breaks your window, the law regulates how you can show ...
Part I of this article briefly discusses the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, along with ...
The premise of this article is that in the law and in the practice of law there are numerous occasio...
Abstract In this paper, we continue our research on a hybrid narrative-argumentative approach to evi...
This Essay focuses not on how fact-finders process evidence but on how they apply the specified stan...
As a result of recent scandals concerning evidence and proof in the administration of criminal justi...
As a result of recent scandals concerning evidence and proof in the administration of criminal justi...
This Symposium on Truth and Its Rivals seems most concerned with what one might think of as the ou...
This essay is an accessible introduction to the proof paradox in legal epistemology. ...
The word evidence ordinarily means the statements, events, items, or sensory perceptions that sugges...
This book addresses the issue of legal truth. Such an issue is two folded. On the one hand, there is...
The trial of an issue of fact is an epistemic, a logical, and a legal affair. In its epistemic aspec...
This paper presents four key results. Firstly, it distinguishes between _partial_ and _consistent_ a...
The distinction between questions of law and questions of fact is deceptively complex. Although any ...
Truth is a fundamental objective of adjudicative processes; ideally, ‘substantive’ as distinct from ...
How does one prove the law? If your neighbor breaks your window, the law regulates how you can show ...
Part I of this article briefly discusses the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, along with ...
The premise of this article is that in the law and in the practice of law there are numerous occasio...
Abstract In this paper, we continue our research on a hybrid narrative-argumentative approach to evi...
This Essay focuses not on how fact-finders process evidence but on how they apply the specified stan...
As a result of recent scandals concerning evidence and proof in the administration of criminal justi...
As a result of recent scandals concerning evidence and proof in the administration of criminal justi...
This Symposium on Truth and Its Rivals seems most concerned with what one might think of as the ou...
This essay is an accessible introduction to the proof paradox in legal epistemology. ...
The word evidence ordinarily means the statements, events, items, or sensory perceptions that sugges...