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FIRE ALARMS, JURIES, AND MORAL JUDGMENT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2014

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Abstract

It's nearly 10:00 AM on a Thursday morning and the courtroom is filled with more than 100 members of the jury pool. Court officials, state police officers, and defendants line the halls waiting to be called for pre-trial conferences and for jury selection to begin, then the fire alarm sounds. There is no obvious evidence of fire, no smoke, no shouts, and no other warnings. At the same time, no one announces that there is a fire drill in progress, that the alarm is merely being tested, or that the alarm was pulled by accident. Sitting in the court room, what would you do? And, more importantly, why would you do it? What goes through your head when you hear the alarm?

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 2014 

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