Book contents
- Evidential Legal Reasoning
- Evidential Legal Reasoning
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Evidence As an Area of Knowledge
- Part II Convergences between Systems
- 3 The Transformation of Chinese Evidence Theories and System
- 4 Truth Finding and the Mirage of Inquisitorial Process
- 5 Evidential Remedies for Procedural Rights Violations
- 6 Common Law Evidence and the Common Law of Human Rights
- Part III On Evidential Inferences
- Part IV Expert Evidence
- Part V Standards of Evidence As Decision-Making Rules
- Index
- References
3 - The Transformation of Chinese Evidence Theories and System
From Objectivity to Relevancy
from Part II - Convergences between Systems
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2022
- Evidential Legal Reasoning
- Evidential Legal Reasoning
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I Evidence As an Area of Knowledge
- Part II Convergences between Systems
- 3 The Transformation of Chinese Evidence Theories and System
- 4 Truth Finding and the Mirage of Inquisitorial Process
- 5 Evidential Remedies for Procedural Rights Violations
- 6 Common Law Evidence and the Common Law of Human Rights
- Part III On Evidential Inferences
- Part IV Expert Evidence
- Part V Standards of Evidence As Decision-Making Rules
- Index
- References
Summary
Fact, as the logical starting point of evidence law, is empirical in nature. It is this very feature of fact that shapes the basic attribute of evidence, i.e., relevance, and determines that fact-finding is a process of empirical inference. Hence, the truth ascertained by the fact-finder through the “Mirror of Evidence” is probabilistic, characterized by the probability of standards of proof. The “objective fact theory”, which has enjoyed a dominant role in Chinese legal scholarship and judicial practice for a long time, confuses empirical fact with objective existence. As a result, the theory of “objective evidence” was established, and judicial notions such as “seeking truth from fact” and “the perpetrator of every murder case must be captured” are derived from this theory. They not only accounted for the deficiencies in Chinese evidence theories and system, but also led to judicial injustices. In recent years, the Chinese evidence theories and system have evinced a trend of transformation, nevertheless, this transformation is still unfinished.
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- Information
- Evidential Legal ReasoningCrossing Civil Law and Common Law Traditions, pp. 53 - 70Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022