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The Elementary Epistemic Arithmetic of Criminal Justice
- Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology
- Edinburgh University Press
- Volume 5, Issue 3, 2008
- pp. 282-294
- Article
- Additional Information
This paper propounds the following theses: 1). that the traditional focus on the Blackstone ratio of errors as a device for setting the criminal standard of proof is ill-conceived, 2). that the preoccupation with the rate of false convictions in criminal trials is myopic, and 3). that the key ratio of interest, in judging the political morality of a system of criminal justice, involves the relation between the risk that an innocent person runs of being falsely convicted of a serious crime and the risk of being criminally victimized by someone who was falsely acquitted.