127,910 research outputs found

    The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology\u27s New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of its Sacred Texts

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    Author: Finkelstein, Israel. Title: Bible unearthed. Publisher: New York: Simon and Schuster, 2002

    Book Review

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    Quantitative Methods in Law represents the efforts of one legal scholar to apply mathematical probability and statistics to the solution of a wide range of legal problems. Michael O. Finkelstein has republished in book form a collection of his articles, beginning with his most famous and most widely cited: the application of mathematical probability to jury discrimination cases. After leading the reader through a series of fascinating applications of statistical problem solving to an impressively wide range of legal situations, the book concludes with the final words of one of the most engaging battles among legal scholars in recent years: the exchange between Michael Finkelstein and Laurence Tribe on the use of Bayes\u27 theorem in a criminal trial to assist the jury in integrating probabilistic evidence with nonnumerical testimony

    Murder after the Merger: A Commentary on Finkelstein

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    Critics have long sought the abolition of the felony murder rule, arguing that it is a form of strict liability. Despite widespread criticism, the rule remains firmly entrenched in many states\u27 criminal statutes. In Merger and Felony Murder, Professor Claire Finkelstein reconciles herself to the current state of affairs, and seeks to make an incremental improvement to the doctrine. She offers a new test for felony murder\u27s merger limitation, which she believes will make merger less mysterious and its application substantially clearer. Briefly put, Finkelstein claims that to understand merger, we must recognize that it is an analytically necessary part of felony murder that the defendant commit two acts - a felony and a killing. Thus, a killing merges with the felony when we have only one act instead of two. To make this determination, Finkelstein articulates a redescriptive test that tells us when the felony can be redescribed as a killing. Despite this project\u27s potential, I believe that Finkelstein\u27s proposed merger test, far from improving our understanding of merger, further confuses the doctrine. Finkelstein starts from the false conceptual premise that felony murder requires both a felony and then a distinct act of killing. There is simply no support for this claim. Nor does the promise of this project bear out in the application of Finkelstein\u27s test to actual cases. First, the test cannot be squared with two other limitations on felony murder liability. Second, Finkelstein\u27s test is guilty of the very arbitrary application for which she criticizes other tests. Finally, Finkelstein unsettles the law by turning paradigmatic cases on their heads. Finkelstein\u27s theory, while claiming to refine felony murder, ultimately abolishes the doctrine as we know it and replaces it with a doctrine that seems even more unacceptable
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