John T. Noonan as Judge: What Can Empathic Judging Mean for Women?

Judge Noonan's book, Persons and Masks of the Law, written a decade before he became judge, stirred up both hope and skepticism. On the one hand, readers felt drawn to what today might be called a kinder, gentler vision of judging. It is a vision that insists on viewing people in their full and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pirie, Sophie H. (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 1995
In: Journal of law and religion
Year: 1995, Volume: 12, Issue: 2, Pages: 541-552
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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520 |a Judge Noonan's book, Persons and Masks of the Law, written a decade before he became judge, stirred up both hope and skepticism. On the one hand, readers felt drawn to what today might be called a kinder, gentler vision of judging. It is a vision that insists on viewing people in their full and connected humanity, rather than as the abstracted and partial legal constructs that filter through the laws of evidence and trial court decisions to the briefs and arguments that appellate judges see. On the other hand, some readers expressed concern that the richer contextualization Noonan had modeled could not, by itself, determine particular outcomes. Those contextualizing facts require interpretation and ordering. Furthermore, for every detail seeming to point in one direction, another detail pointing to an opposite outcome is likely to be available. In other words, contextualization risks either endless regression or arbitrary truncation. Despite the polite controversy—some of the politeness no doubt due to the fact that at the time Noonan was a professor and in no danger of wreaking any contextualist havoc on the Rule of Law—his book did ensconce the trope of "empathy." 
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