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Date: Thu, 23 Aug 2001 15:42:42 +0800
From: "Chen Yixiong, Eric" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Subject: [psychohistory] Designing a Legal System
The legal system consists of the set of rules that determine apporiate and
non-apporiate behaviour in a society, as well as its the people which enforce it. (For
this discussion we will only include the rules portion.) It must make (sometimes
conflicting) decisions that affect the lives of those it has justification over.
A poorly designed legal system, in the worst case scenerio, can wreak a society as
much as, or worse than, an outbreak of war or uncontrollable disease. Less extreme
cases can usually result in, but not limited, to the following:
1) bureaucratic inefficiency processing legal cases
2) the conviction of innocent parties
3) the non-remedy or incorrect remedy of undisireable behaviour
4) the inability to implement the rules and remedies
5) in the inefficient method of settlements between the wronged parties and the guilty
ones.
One would also find it difficult to comply with a poorly designed legal system, for a
legal system exists to reduce undesirable behavior against the values of society, and
not to make as many things as undisireable as possible thus increasing the cost of
participating in that society unneccessarily.
Our current legal systems operates much like an expert system, with thick rule books
and lots of lawyers. The assumption behind this seems that, you can patch all the
holes on the legal system if you have enough rules. However, according to G�del's
Incompleteness Theorm, such an undertaking would prove furtile because no one set of a
system of rules can provide both a consistent structure nor a complete one.
This means, if you want a "fair" (as in consistent) laws and yet want these laws to
cover everything, then dream on. Yet, the legal system continues, apparently unaware
of this contradiction.
We had not also figured out the problem of having to learn and memorise such huge rule
sets. Who (other than people working directly in the legal system and those with
photographic memory, of course) can reasonably remember an encyclopedia's worth of
such rules? Yet common law clearly states that ignorance of the law cannot excuse one
from legal liability.
With each day, as new developments appear in our world that never existed previously
which create new legal implications, the rule book only gets deeper. We also have a
corresponding book of case laws that get even thicker still. Somehow, it would seem
redicious to expect everyone to know all these rules.
Hence, I propose using the following systems in combination:
- Heuristic System
A heuristically based legal system would operate based on objectives instead of rules.
First, we have to start from what we want to achieve. We may want to ensure our
freedom (such as of the ability to publish freely (i.e. right of free speech)), or we
may simply want to prevent overcrowding on buses that could increase accident rates.
Firstly, we must determine the fundemental objectives a society wishes to achieve,
which we may call a society's value. These should not have too large a number or they
will introduce additional complexities and perhaps inconsistents to the legal system.
These principles will definitely create ambigulities, because of the "complete" nature.
We could include the following varieties:
1) Certain Freedom(s) (e.g. to publish freely, to self-actualise)
2) Persuit of Happiness
3) Preservation of the status quo
For each of those we choose or all of them, we must describe a vivid, accurate vision
of how a society implementing these rules will look like. We cannot merely declare
that one has the "right" to life, or liberty, or happiness, but we must describe and
show our vision of a future society operate on these principles to clarify what we
mean.
Going a step further, we then create a counter-vision, a dystrophic society that
implements the opposite rules that we have. We also create a third vision, of someone
managing to twist the principles of our society to their opposities, and what
syndromes and problems will arrive with this. With this, we fight ambiguity with
ambiguity which will hopefully tell us if we had made the right choice.
One (usually the founding members) must choose these principles carefully, for to
change them would actually mean a change in the entire society and the systems of
rules, introducing great instabilities. The same goes for the vision of the society,
which one may update in accordance with future technology but not change.
Secondly, we have to state our objectives, and then we derive a set of general rules
to prevent that. For instance, we could specify a certain formula for the vehicle
overloading and allow the owners to compute the exact weight and approximate number of
people, instead of declaring an arbitrary and ambiguous amount (such as 150 adults or
300 children). For this case, we may also specify that we wish to reduce pain and
suffering by reducing the amount of accidents.
For the problem "free speech", we can specify we want free disclosure of information
and ideas and then work towards how to make it happen, for instance, by creating a low
cost, efficient and non-censored information distribution system that everyone has
access to, and then requiring people to publish dually (one copy to the media source
they want to publish, and the other to the information system). Note that this concept
of "free speech" may again, sound too ambiguous for us to formulate a system to
adequately address it.
Lastly, the set of general rules must not exceed a certain length and complexity that
would in total, take more than a week to learn and understand. They must exist as
clearly worded as possible, so that one cannot read multiple interpretions into them.
Most importantly, they should exist in the public domain, easily accessible and easily
referenced, unlike our current law books. All rules should use this system first,
before others.
- Expert System
A expert system acts as a system of second resort, if heuristics cannot solve an
issue. It does not neccessarily alleviate G�del's problem, however, it provides a
quick and easy way for one to look up information based on rules without having to
consult lawyers and other legal experts who may have a certain bias or incomplete
data. It also provides a great substitute to a human judge, which may have biases and
insufficient time to handle all cases fast enough.
We first assume that we encode our current set of minimum rules into a consistent set
of items. We flag ambiguous areas, when we or the system encounters them, and allow
users to make a decision about choosing to choose which side of the ambiguity to
continue with. The system will also take in decisions made by the legal system
previously in helping it to determine the course of action.
When the one has a case against him or another, one can simply consult the system,
entering the relevant data as the system asks for information. After one has completed
the data entry, one should get a rough decision against or for one, or at least
probabilistic decision. This decision will also contain summaries and links to full
details of the rules explaining the reasoning it uses to arrive at the decision(s).
Thus the legal system should also have the aim of reducing the amount of ambiguity in
its decisions. This system will demostrate whether a legal system can meet this
standard.
- Intellicratic
An intellicratic system can function in two modes:
1) as a system of last resort, in the absense of a pre-existing legal principles
applying to a certain problem
In this case the legal system will post all details to the public as an Request for
Solutions (RFS). The public will debate and rule over the judgment. After this, we can
insert the judgment into the expert system.
2) in the redesign of a system of heuristics or the expert system
In the event of the discovery that a certain subset of rules do not further the core
values of a society. If a rule does not further the core values, then this rule must
crease to exist. The public will rule over the pros and cons of the rule and the
remedy, if any, against this problem that the outcasted rule ought to protect.
Once a ruling had occured, this information will enter the expert system and help
define future related issues.
Hence, I had proposed how a possible improved legal system could operate. For more
data about Intellicracy, please refer to sociologistics.webhop.org
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