How do jurors in accident cases think about negligence, and to what extent do their conceptions conform to the law? This Article examines closing arguments in several accident cases, showing the extent to which advocates appeal to the knowledge structures and inferential heuristics that people use to judge causation and responsibility in everyday life. Through argument structure, point of view, verb tense, metaphor, and other linguistic devices, attorneys construct a rhetoric that combines legal rules with the tools of ordinary judgment. The conceptions of negligence implicit in these arguments occasionally conflict with the law; the Article indicates the cognitive and sociopsychological grounds for such conflict. More often, the analysis o...
At the inception of their careers, most lawyers have little or no background in classical rhetoric. ...
Articles limning the law pertaining to judicial notice are legion, and the footnotes which have been...
An open-handed image of rhetoric presents an argument against the closed fist of logic and the “nast...
How do jurors in accident cases think about negligence, and to what extent do their conceptions conf...
Within the framework of the Story Model of juror decision making, using an actual personal injury au...
With its powerful account of the normative principles embodied in the structure and practice of the ...
The purpose of this Article is to help answer the question how do judges convey the meaning of the ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
The article briefly discusses the impossibility of a strict formalist or positivist approach to lega...
Criticisms of the civil jury, including charges that the jury is biased against business, have been ...
This article argues that there is nothing overly confusing about the law ofcausation in negligence. ...
Sometime before the trial of every personal injury case, each lawyer involved must make sure that th...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
The general principles to be applied by court or jury in deciding whether conduct is reasonable have...
The struggle for justice is commonly articulated in literature and drama through metaphors of physic...
At the inception of their careers, most lawyers have little or no background in classical rhetoric. ...
Articles limning the law pertaining to judicial notice are legion, and the footnotes which have been...
An open-handed image of rhetoric presents an argument against the closed fist of logic and the “nast...
How do jurors in accident cases think about negligence, and to what extent do their conceptions conf...
Within the framework of the Story Model of juror decision making, using an actual personal injury au...
With its powerful account of the normative principles embodied in the structure and practice of the ...
The purpose of this Article is to help answer the question how do judges convey the meaning of the ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
The article briefly discusses the impossibility of a strict formalist or positivist approach to lega...
Criticisms of the civil jury, including charges that the jury is biased against business, have been ...
This article argues that there is nothing overly confusing about the law ofcausation in negligence. ...
Sometime before the trial of every personal injury case, each lawyer involved must make sure that th...
Social life is inherently risky. Who should bear the costs of accidental harm? That issue has been t...
The general principles to be applied by court or jury in deciding whether conduct is reasonable have...
The struggle for justice is commonly articulated in literature and drama through metaphors of physic...
At the inception of their careers, most lawyers have little or no background in classical rhetoric. ...
Articles limning the law pertaining to judicial notice are legion, and the footnotes which have been...
An open-handed image of rhetoric presents an argument against the closed fist of logic and the “nast...