When We Hold No Truths to Be Self-Evident: Truth, Belief, Trust, and the Decline in Trials

32 Pages Posted: 2 May 2011

See all articles by Lisa Blomgren Amsler (formerly Bingham)

Lisa Blomgren Amsler (formerly Bingham)

Indiana University Bloomington - Paul H. O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs; University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law

Date Written: February 1, 2006

Abstract

This article explores the relationship between the "vanishing trial" and the changing ways in which we think about truth. First, it briefly overviews how we think about knowing what is true: epistemology and the history of philosophy. Second, it looks to the philosophy of science and history of social science for new theories and methods about how we ascertain and construct meaning and what we believe to be real and true. Third, it examines our changing relation to information in the face of the "information explosion": information is the evidence upon which we reach a conclusion about what is true. Fourth, it relates these changes to the philosophy of law and theories of the jury and adversary system. Fifth, it examines what social science has taught us about truth, belief, trust, justice, and control over information. Finally, it addresses how these changes may explain why litigants are using mediation, arbitration, and other forms of appropriate dispute resolution in lieu of the adversarial civil trial. People are choosing to exercise control over what information is used in disputing and over who is using it for what purposes. This takes them away from the civil trial, a formalistic process with strict rules about who can be a witness, what they can say on the stand, what information is admitted as relevant and material to a decision, and what standards the decision-maker must use to evaluate that information. If complexity in the modern world has taught us anything, it is that we no longer hold much to be self-evident.

Keywords: vanishing trial, dispute resolution, mediation, jurisprudence

JEL Classification: D63, D74, K41

Suggested Citation

Amsler, Lisa Blomgren, When We Hold No Truths to Be Self-Evident: Truth, Belief, Trust, and the Decline in Trials (February 1, 2006). Journal of Dispute Resolution, Vol. 2006, p. 131, 2006, Indiana University, Bloomington School of Public & Environmental Affairs Research Paper No. 2011-05-10 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1827802

Lisa Blomgren Amsler (Contact Author)

Indiana University Bloomington - Paul H. O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs ( email )

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University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law ( email )

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