Ulax

Legal reasoning

4 posts in this topic

Hey folks,

I'd like some help contemplating and generating insights in regards to legal reasoning.

During my legal studies I've been constantly perplexed by the question of how to decide legal cases.

Why should a case be decided in one way compared to another?

I'm quite firm in my contention that all reasoning is inherently arbitrary, owing to my being persuaded by the infinite/ epistemic regress argument.

Which leaves me in a pickle about how to approach this sort of issue. I've been contemplating this and reading academic papers on this for years but nothing quite resonates. So, would appreciate people chucking ideas at me.


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2 hours ago, Ulax said:

 

Why should a case be decided in one way compared to another?

 to improve our civilization. 

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Because the law is based on past experiences rather than truth and ethics ( which I define as implementing the best possible solution).

Imagine taking on a task and making a new rule for every new problem and decision made. Eventually, you are going to create an ungodly mess of complexity. Just like any chaotic game, the people are structured in a hierarchy so that the semi strong will take orders from those above them because they are comforted by the fact that people are below them so they can feel secure. Anyway, the advantage of the hierarchy is that someone will make a decision and many people are willing to go along with it because they feel secure in their position. These legal decisions are then made by the top accordingly to the time, place and their worldview.

So now that some decisions are made and this massive mess of systems is starting to run smoothly so they don't want to really mess something up so they go along with it every if it isn't so relevant anymore.

That is one perspective of many, but I am ready to do something else lol.


What you resist, persists and less of you exists. There is a part of you that never leaves. You are not in; you have never been. You know. You put it there and time stretches. 

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@Ulax First mistake, use simpler vocabulary. People don't like it.

It's hard to persuade people. 

Edited by Bird Larry

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