|
||||
|
||||
Ten Half-Truths About Tort LawJohn C. P. GoldbergHarvard Law School Valparaiso University Law Review, Vol. 42, p. 1221, 2008 Vanderbilt Public Law Research Paper No. 08-08 Abstract: John Kenneth Galbraith coined the phrase "the conventional wisdom" to refer to a collection of ideas that members of a group find acceptable. Acceptability, he observed, rests on a variety of considerations other than veracity, which means conventional wisdom can be wrong. Sometimes it is dead wrong. Other times it blurs truth and falsity. In the latter case, it might be said to contain half-truths. Because professors are in the business of critical inquiry, one might think that they are less reliant on "mere" conventional wisdom, but this supposition is false. Conventional wisdom plays as much of a role in academia as in other walks of life. The concern of this Article, based on the 2007 Valparaiso University Monsanto Lecture, is to explore conventional wisdom among torts professors, and perhaps law professors more generally. Specifically, it identifies ten half-truths embedded in standard academic depictions of tort. Because each distorts as much as or more than it enlightens, each must be discarded. The point of this exercise is conceptual and pragmatic. The immediate goal is to clarify; the further hope is that clarification might lead to better judgments about how to adjudicate tort cases, how to undertake legislative reform of tort law, and how to teach torts.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 57 Keywords: Accidents, Addison, Claims, Common Law, Compensation, Delict, Hilliard, Half-Truths, Holmes, Injury, Insurance, Make-Whole, Policy-Making, Pluralism, Standards of Liability, Settlement, Theory, Top-Down Theory, Torts, Trespass, Wrongs Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: April 21, 2008Suggested CitationContact Information
|
|
||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo2 in 1.594 seconds