刑法的信仰状态

James Macleod
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引用次数: 6

摘要

信念-状态归属——确定某人“知道”、“相信”、“知道”等等——是法律许多领域的核心。在刑法中,知识和鲁莽之间的区别,以及广泛陪审团对其他信念状态的指示的使用,都是以对这些信念状态术语的含义有一个共同和稳定的理解为前提的。但是,在哲学和心理学交叉领域的大量实证研究——打着“实验认识论”的旗号——揭示了外行人对行为和概念的理解与学者、法院、也许还有立法者的假设是如何系统性地不同的。在实施过程中,即使假设陪审员严格遵循陪审团的指示,犯罪概念也比传统智慧所认为的更依赖于上下文和规范性评估。因此,知识和鲁莽之间的差别比通常认为的要小;陪审员一贯将知识“过度”归于刑事被告;像“信念”、“意识”和“有意识的无视”这样的概念在不同的语境中有不同的含义,导致犯罪行为调查结果系统地回应了传统上被认为与这些术语的含义无关的案件方面。本文首次系统地阐述了陪审员对刑法所援引的特定信念状态的归属的影响因素。在调查了犯罪行为的陪审团指示,将实验认识论文献介绍给关于犯罪行为的法律文献,并研究了这些文献对刑法的影响之后,本文考虑了如何开始弥合犯罪行为理论与实践之间惊人的巨大差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Belief States in Criminal Law
Belief-state ascription—determining what someone “knew,” “believed,” was “aware of,” etc.—is central to many areas of law. In criminal law, the distinction between knowledge and recklessness, and the use of broad jury instructions concerning other belief states, presupposes a common and stable understanding of what those belief-state terms mean. But a wealth of empirical work at the intersection of philosophy and psychology—falling under the banner of “Experimental Epistemology”—reveals how laypeople’s understandings of mens rea concepts differ systematically from what scholars, courts, and perhaps legislators, have assumed.As implemented, mens rea concepts are much more context-dependent and normatively evaluative than the conventional wisdom suggests, even assuming that jurors are following jury instructions to the letter. As a result, there is less difference between knowledge and recklessness than is typically assumed; jurors consistently “over”-ascribe knowledge to criminal defendants; and concepts like “belief,” “awareness,” and “conscious disregard” mean different things in different contexts, resulting in mens rea findings systematically responsive to aspects of the case traditionally considered irrelevant to the meaning of those terms.This Article provides the first systematic account of the factors driving jurors’ ascriptions of the specific belief states criminal law invokes. After surveying mens rea jury instructions, introducing the Experimental Epistemology literature to the legal literature on mens rea, and examining the implications of that literature for criminal law, this Article considers ways to begin bridging the surprisingly large gap between mens rea theory and practice.
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