-
I defend the thesis that legal standards of proof are reducible to thresholds of probability. Many reject this thesis because it appears to permit finding defendants liable solely on the basis of statistical evidence. To the contrary, I argue – by combining Thomson's (1986) causal analysis of legal evidence with formal methods of causal inference – that legal standards of proof can be reduced to probabilities, but that deriving these probabilities involves more than just statistics.Just probabilitiesNoûs 58 (4): 948-972. 2024. -
Proceed with CautionCanadian Journal of Philosophy (1): 6-25. 2021.It is becoming more common that the decision-makers in private and public institutions are predictive algorithmic systems, not humans. This article argues that relying on algorithmic systems is procedurally unjust in contexts involving background conditions of structural injustice. Under such nonideal conditions, algorithmic systems, if left to their own devices, cannot meet a necessary condition of procedural justice, because they fail to provide a sufficiently nuanced model of which cases coun…Read more
Australian National University
PhD, 2019
Areas of Specialization
| Decision Theory and Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
13 more