In many discussions I'm pulled back to the distinction between not-guilty
and innocent
as a way to demonstrate how the burden of proof works and what the true default position should be in any given argument. A lot of people seem to not have any problem seeing the distinction, but many intelligent people for some reason don't see it.
In this article I explain why the distinction exists and why it matters, in particular why it matters in real-life scenarios, especially when people try to shift the burden of proof.
Essentially, in my view the universe we are talking about is {uncertain,guilty,innocent}
, therefore not-guilty
is guilty'
, which is {uncertain,innocent}
. Therefore innocent ⇒ not-guilty
, but not-guilty ⇏ innocent
.
When O. J. Simpson was acquitted, that doesn’t mean he was found innocent, it means the prosecution could not prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt. He was found not-guilty, which is not the same as innocent. It very well could be that the jury found the truth of the matter uncertain
.
This notion has implications in many real-life scenarios when people want to shift the burden of proof if you reject a claim when it's not substantiated. They wrongly assume you claim their claim is false (equivalent to innocent
), when in truth all you are doing is staying in the default position (uncertain
).
Rejecting the claim that a god exists is not the same as claim a god doesn't exist: it doesn't require a burden of proof because it's the default position. Agnosticism is the default position. The burden of proof is on the people making the claim.
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Notes -
It matters to other people whether the evidence shows that the defendant is innocent or fails to show that he is guilty. We don't want to imprison someone accused of rape unless we are reasonably sure he is guilty, but a woman might want to avoid being alone with him unless she is pretty sure he is innocent. Similarly for many other crimes.
That's the same thing. If it fails to show they are guilty, then they are innocent. At least as far as legal system is concerned. All the rest can be done on Twitter, that's what it's for.
That's not a task for a legal system, and it can not reasonably perform it. Moreover, putting such task on it would make it very easy to permanently stain somebody's life with an accusation that is impossible to refute - if I say you're a rapist, and the court says "there's no proof but we're not 100% sure - who knows what happened there, we weren't there" then how you prove you're not? You can't sue the court for being not sure and demand them to make up their minds. And there's no process to make them sure. So you are now "possibly rapist" forever, even though there's absolutely no proof anybody could find of it.
No, they're not. That's the whole point of the article. The legal system considers a person who has been acquitted to not be found guilty, which is why the jury renders the verdict quite literally "not guilty".
In the eyes of the law, it is the same. Every legal consequence is the same. Of course, everybody can have their own opinions - but that is no longer the domain of the law. That's my whole point - if we let the law talk about something that is beyond the lawful processes, we are asking for trouble.
And yet every legal resource out there claims they are most assuredly not the same.
Would you be able to support your assertion with some quotes from the said resources?
Just google: "not guilty" versus "innocent":
Cornell Law School:
MacDonald Law Office:
Court Review:
The Associated Press:
But the reality is that no amount of evidence is going make you accept you were wrong, is there?
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