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Legal Argumentation 2. Henry Prakken March 28, 2013. The structure of arguments: basic elements. (Basic) arguments have: Premises (grounds) A conclusion A reasoning step from the premises to the conclusion. Conclusion. therefore. …. Premise 1. Premise n. P. E is expert on P.
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Legal Argumentation 2 Henry Prakken March 28, 2013
The structure of arguments:basic elements • (Basic) arguments have: • Premises (grounds) • A conclusion • A reasoning step from the premises to the conclusion Conclusion therefore ….. Premise 1 Premise n
P E is expert on P E says that P The offer was written The offer was made in an email The offer was made in a letter Three types of support Cumulative (all premises needed for conclusion) Alternative (one premise suffices for conclusion) S was at crime scene Aggregate (the more support the better) S’s DNA matches DNA found at crime scene Witness W saw S at crime scene
Implicit premises The offer was written The offer was made in a letter
Implicit premises The offer was written The offer was made in a letter If an offer is made in a letter or email then it is written
Manslaughter Intent Killed Art. 287 CC Recklessness Police radars are a reliable source of information on speed Collision Victim died Caused by collision Drove 180 where max 80 Police radar Witness: “collision” Police report: “collision” Report coroner Report coroner Computer log file
Overview of course • Week 1: • Basic structure of arguments • Combinations of premises • implicit premises • Multi-step arguments • Week 2: • Arguments and counterarguments • Argument schemes (1) • Week 3: • Argument schemes (2) • Evaluating argument
Legal reasoning: three stages • Determining the facts of the case • Classifying the facts under the conditions of a legal rule • Applying the rule
Legal reasoning is considering arguments pro and con • Determining the facts of the case • conflicting sources of evidence • generalisations with exceptions • … • Classifying the facts under the conditions of a legal rule • Interpretation rules can have exceptions • conflicting interpretations • … • Applying the rule • Conflicting rules • Reasons not to apply the rule • …
Example • Evidence problems • General terms • Exceptions • Purpose of the rule • Principle “Vehicles are not allowed in the park”
Legal reasoning is adversarial • Legal cases involve clashes of interest Dispute • study constructingandattacking arguments
Arguments and counterarguments
Three types of counterarguments • (Basic) arguments have: • Premises (grounds) • A conclusion • A reasoning step from the premises to the conclusion • So arguments can be attacked on: • Their premises • Their conclusion • Except if deductive • The reasoning step from premises to conclusion • Except if deductive
Deductive vs defeasible arguments Documents that look like avidavits usually are avidavits This document looks like an avidavit Therefore this is an avidavit All men are mortal Socrates is a man Therfore, Socrates is mortal
Deductive vs defeasible arguments Documents that look like avidavits usually are avidavits This document looks like an avidavit Therefore (presumably) this is an avidavit All men are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal
Attack on conclusion Smoking increases the chance of cancer Smoking does not increase the chance of cancer E1 is oncologist E1 says so E2 says so E2 is oncologist
Attack on premise Smoking increases the chance of cancer E1 only says that there is no evidence that smoking does not increase the chance of cancer E1 is oncologist E1 says so Fragment 1 experts examination report
Attack on premise is often attack on intermediate conclusion Smoking increases the chance of cancer E1 only says that there is no evidence that smoking does not increase the chance of cancer E1 is oncologist E1 says so Fragment 2 experts examination report Fragment 1 experts examination report
Attack on inference step Smoking increases the chance of cancer Smoking does not increase the chance of cancer E1 is oncologist E1 says so E2 says so E2 is oncologist E2 is biased Experts are often biased towards who pays them E2 is paid by Marlboro
Argument schemes and Critical questions
Argument schemes: general form • But also critical questions • Negative answers are counterarguments Premise 1, … , Premise n Therefore (presumably), conclusion
Role of critical questions • Critical questions are pointers to counterarguments • Some point to attacks on a premise • Some point to attacks on a conclusion • Some point to attacks on an inference
Legal rule application (simplistic) IF conditions THEN legal consequence conditions So, legal consequence
Legal rule application:critical questions • Is the rule valid? • Is the rule applicable to this case? • Must the rule be applied? • Is there a statutory exception? • Does applying the rule violate its purpose? • Does applying the rule have bad consequences? • Is there a principle that overrides the rule?
Reasoning with generalisations Guilt • Critical questions: • How strong is the connection? • Is there an exception? • Illegal immigrant? • Client of prostitute? • … P If P then normally Q So (presumably), Q Fleas If flees then normally guilt People who flee from a crime scene normally have consciousness of guilt
How are generalisations justified? • Scientific research (induction) • Experts • Commonsense • Individual opinions • Prejudice? Very reliable Very unreliable
Inducing generalisations (1) • Critical questions: • Was the sample large enough? • was the selection of test cases biased? In the investigated cases most P’s were Q’s So (presumably), most P’s are Q’s Most experts are called in the initial stages of the proceedings In the investigated cases most experts were called in the initial stages of the proceedings
Inducing generalisations (2) • Critical questions: • Was the size of the sample large enough? • was the sample selection biased? Almost all observed P’s were Q’s Therefore (presumably), If P then usually Q A ballpoint shot with this type of bow will usually cause this type of eye injury In 16 of 17 tests the ballpoint shot with this bow caused this type of eye injury
Expert testimony • Critical questions: • Is E biased? • Is P consistent with what other experts say? • Is P consistent with known evidence? E is expert on D E says that P P is within D Therefore (presumably), P is the case
Witness testimony • Critical questions: • Is W sincere? • Is W’s memory OK? • Were W’s senses OK? Witness W says P Therefore (presumably), P
Analogy (normative) • Critical questions: • Are there also relevant differences between the cases? • Are there conflicting precedents? Relevantly similar cases should be decided in the same way This case is relevantly similar to that precedent Therefore (presumably), this case should have The same outcome as the precedent
Analogy (factual) • Critical questions: • Are there also relevant differences between the cases? • Are there conflicting similar cases? Relevantly similar cases have the same outcome This case is relevantly similar to that case Therefore (presumably), this case will have The same outcome as that case
Temporal persistence(Forward) • Critical questions: • Was P known to be false between T1 and T2? • Is the gap between T1 and T2 too long? P is true at T1 and T2 is later than T1 Therefore (presumably), P is still true at T2
Temporal persistence(Backward) • Critical questions: • Was P known to be false between T1 and T2? • Is the gap between T1 and T2 too long? P is true at T2 and T1 is earlier than T2 Therefore (presumably), P was already true at T1
S murdered V d.m.p. If V murdered in L at T and S was in L at T, then (presumably) S murdered V V murdered in house at 4:45 S in 4:45 aggr X in 4:45 S in 4:45 backw temp pers forw temp pers S left 5:00 S entered 4:30 S entered 4:30 testimony testimony W1: “S entered 4:30” W2: “S left 5:00”
Next week • Argument schemes (2) • Evaluating arguments