19 research outputs found

    Secrets Clutched in a Dead Hand: Rethinking Posthumous Psychotherapist-Patient Privilege in the Light of Reason and Experience with Other Evidentiary Privileges

    Get PDF
    Attorney-client privilege was held by the Supreme Court to extend beyond death in 1996, albeit only ratifying centuries of accepted practice in the lower courts and England before them. But with the lawyer’s client dead, the natural outcome of such a rule is that privilege—the legal enforcement of secrecy—will persist forever, for only the dead client could ever have waived and thus end it. Perpetuity is not traditionally favored by the law for good reason, and yet a long and broad line of precedent endorses its application to privilege. The recent emergence of a novel species of privilege for psychotherapy, however, affords an opportunity to take a fresh look at the long-tolerated enigma of eternity and the imprudence of thoughtlessly importing it to the newest addition to the family of privileges. Frankly, humanity has always deserved better than legalisms arrogating to the inscrutability of the infinite

    Achievement of the planetary defense investigations of the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission

    Get PDF
    NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission was the first to demonstrate asteroid deflection, and the mission's Level 1 requirements guided its planetary defense investigations. Here, we summarize DART's achievement of those requirements. On 2022 September 26, the DART spacecraft impacted Dimorphos, the secondary member of the Didymos near-Earth asteroid binary system, demonstrating an autonomously navigated kinetic impact into an asteroid with limited prior knowledge for planetary defense. Months of subsequent Earth-based observations showed that the binary orbital period was changed by –33.24 minutes, with two independent analysis methods each reporting a 1σ uncertainty of 1.4 s. Dynamical models determined that the momentum enhancement factor, β, resulting from DART's kinetic impact test is between 2.4 and 4.9, depending on the mass of Dimorphos, which remains the largest source of uncertainty. Over five dozen telescopes across the globe and in space, along with the Light Italian CubeSat for Imaging of Asteroids, have contributed to DART's investigations. These combined investigations have addressed topics related to the ejecta, dynamics, impact event, and properties of both asteroids in the binary system. A year following DART's successful impact into Dimorphos, the mission has achieved its planetary defense requirements, although work to further understand DART's kinetic impact test and the Didymos system will continue. In particular, ESA's Hera mission is planned to perform extensive measurements in 2027 during its rendezvous with the Didymos–Dimorphos system, building on DART to advance our knowledge and continue the ongoing international collaboration for planetary defense

    Hoban_J_cinerea_Mol_Ecol_2010_Microsat_Data_Dryad

    No full text
    This file contains the microsatellite genotypes for 11 loci and 904 individuals, in 29 natural populations (forest) of butternut (J cinerea L) across eastern North America. These are the data referred to in the first sentence of the Results. They are data AFTER removal of hybrid individuals, identical genotypes, or individuals with too much missing data. These data are therefore the data used to calculate all statistics in the paper. The data are in GENEPOP format. The names of individuals are unique identification numbers used in our lab. The names of the loci correspond to those from Robichaud et al, and Hoban et al, as described in the Materials and Methods of the paper

    Hoban_J_cinerea_Mol_Ecol_2010_Microsat_Data_Dryad

    No full text
    This file contains the microsatellite genotypes for 11 loci and 904 individuals, in 29 natural populations (forest) of butternut (J cinerea L) across eastern North America. These are the data referred to in the first sentence of the Results. They are data AFTER removal of hybrid individuals, identical genotypes, or individuals with too much missing data. These data are therefore the data used to calculate all statistics in the paper. The data are in GENEPOP format. The names of individuals are unique identification numbers used in our lab. The names of the loci correspond to those from Robichaud et al, and Hoban et al, as described in the Materials and Methods of the paper

    Unjust Laws and Illegal Norms

    No full text
    Due to a variety of circumstances, lawmakers occasionally create laws whose aims are perceived as outright unjust by the majority of the people. In other situations, the law may utilize improper means for the pursuit of a just goal. In all such cases, lawmaking processes generate rules that do not reflect the values of the underlying population. In these cases individuals may face legal commands or prohibitions that conflict with their sense of justice or fairness. Individuals can oppose unjust laws through protest. Social opposition to unjust laws may trigger social norms that can have countervailing effects on legal intervention. The dynamic effects of these phenomena are the object of this paper
    corecore