The only thing I can imagine that would work as a "test" here is thinking about whether the principle really matches one's feelings/intuitions. Is that the sort of thing you have in mind? — Terrapin Station
Consider that you find yourself amongst a crowd of protesters. You're not one, but are detained anyway for interrogation, simply due to being in the wrong place at the wrong time - coming home from school.
This has happened. Where is the crime?
How much first hand experience with the judicial system do you have? — Shamshir
Should be easy to find a law or something that states you don’t have to have committed a crime to be arrested. Hell, it’s how law enforcement works everywhere. — NOS4A2
Halfwits believe one can be arrested without having committed a crime. Halfwits and authoritarians believe in arbitrary arrest. — NOS4A2
There's a 'probable' in probable cause.
"A common definition is "a reasonable amount of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong to justify a prudent and cautious person's belief that certain facts are probably true"."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probable_cause
That means you don't have to have committed a crime to be arrested. All that is necessary is that a law enforcement official has a reasonable belief that you have.
If you don't understand this, we could be forgiven for assuming you have a serious comprehension disability or are trolling. Please help us not to think that.
Probable cause clearly states that the detained is suspected of criminal activity, not that he has committed any.
Airport security checks function this way.
So then you do allow for a methodology which permits all kinds of nonsense, like the example I gave? And... you don't see that as problematic? — S
What's the other option? — Terrapin Station
A methodology which doesn't permit all kinds of nonsense. — S
I don't suppose I'm going to be able to get details on that. — Terrapin Station
I don't know if you misread my response above. I said that the only thing that I can imagine as a "test" is thinking about whether the principle really matches one's feelings/intuitions.
So, in other words, thinking, "Do I really feel, or are my intuitions really, that we should have no crimes that are words starting with the letter 'M'." And then if the answer is "Yes," it has passed the test. — Terrapin Station
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