Originally posted by jean
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A deficit of understanding - how prevalent is this?
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Beef Oven
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostIf they can't dress properly for a serious formal thing like this, how can we trust their deliberations?
Wearing a suit doesn't make your brain work you know
I once went here
The Insitute of Astronomy is a department of the University of Cambridge and is engaged in teaching and research in the fields of theoretical and observational Astronomy.
the lack of suits didn't indicate a lack of intelligence or ability to understand complex phenomena
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI've just read this bit from the link
"It was noted during the Pryce case that many of the jurors were dressed casually and none of the men wore a shirt and tie."
which means WHAT ?
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postwho on earth reads this crap let alone takes any notice of it ?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostIf they can't dress properly for a serious formal thing like this, how can we trust their deliberations?
Anyway, to return to the topic and answer the question directly, I would say "about as prevalent as an understanding of deficit" (Gideon, Chapter 11)...
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post"Properly" ?
Wearing a suit doesn't make your brain work you know
I once went here
The Insitute of Astronomy is a department of the University of Cambridge and is engaged in teaching and research in the fields of theoretical and observational Astronomy.
the lack of suits didn't indicate a lack of intelligence or ability to understand complex phenomena
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Beef Oven
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Post"Properly" ?
Wearing a suit doesn't make your brain work you know
I once went here
The Insitute of Astronomy is a department of the University of Cambridge and is engaged in teaching and research in the fields of theoretical and observational Astronomy.
the lack of suits didn't indicate a lack of intelligence or ability to understand complex phenomena
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Of course it's an irrelevance.
But the DM's strictures on their clothes wasn't why I posted the link.
I was interested in how jurors from a cultural background that assumes marriage necessarily involves subservience of a wife to her husband might well struggle with the idea that VP had any choice in the matter at all.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven View PostIt's about standards. We will end up with chaos if there is no consensus about proper dress codes.
Utter tosh (and i'm not talking about Peter)
It's never that simple. But I wouldn't want a world of Nigel Kennedys.
Err... no, it's about being able to understand what they were there for. How they were dressed is a total irrelevance.
as Jean points out
the DM makes the (not unexpected) great play that "only two" were "white" implying that somehow this is linked to a "lack of understanding".
Reading the questions as written in the DM article it's clear that (assuming that these really ARE the questions ?) that they aren't exactly written by someone with no understanding or capacity for intelligent thought one only has to look at the language used ......how many people who don't have understanding of English use the word "Infer" ?
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postone only has to look at the language used ......how many people who don't have understanding of English use the word "Infer" ?
Of course, if they had flipped a coin and solemnly delivered their verdict presumably no one would have called the jury deficient?
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Originally posted by Julien Sorel View PostOf course, if they had flipped a coin and solemnly delivered their verdict presumably no one would have called the jury deficient?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostWhich is an argument in favour of the jury system and this jury in particular. They could have felt pressurised ('I'll accept a majority verdict,' the judge had said.) But they didn't do that: they didn't feel able to arrive at a verdict and said so. The reason why they were unable to (they didn't understand the job, they didn't feel there was enough evidence, no one had brought any cash so they couldn't toss a coin, whatever it was), the interests if justice were served by their delivering no verdict on this occasion. Which they duly did ...
Lots of people bemoaning the "deficit of understanding" without actually READING what the questions (or the lecture) were.
(not sure of the grammar of that last one , questions are plural hence WERE but the lecture was singular obviously a "deficit" on my part)
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