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95 Cornell L. Rev. 1191 (2009-2010)
Can Bad Science be Good Evidence - Neuroscience, Lie Detection, and Beyond

handle is hein.journals/clqv95 and id is 1203 raw text is: ESSAY
CAN BAD SCIENCE BE GOOD EVIDENCE?
NEUROSCIENCE, LIE DETECTION,
AND BEYOND
Frederick Schauert
INTRODUCTION
How should the legal system confront the advances in the brain
sciences that may possibly allow more accurate determinations of ve-
racity-lie detecting-than those that now pervade the litigation pro-
cess? In this Essay, I question the view, widespread among the
scientists most familiar with these advances, that the neuroscience of
lie detection is not, or at least not yet, nearly reliable enough to be
used in civil or criminal litigation or for related forensic purposes.
But in challenging the neuroscientists and their allies, I make no
claims about the science of lie detection that go beyond the current
state of scientific knowledge or, more importantly, my own ability to
speak about the relevant scientific developments. Rather, I argue that
because law's goals and norms differ from those of science, there is no
more reason to impose the standards of science on law than to impose
the standards of law on science. Law must use science, and should
always prefer good science to bad. In some contexts, however, good
science may still not be good enough for law, while in other con-
texts-hence the title of this Essay-bad science, as measured by the
standards of scientists, may still have valuable legal uses. To be clear,
my goal in this Essay is decidedly not to argue that neuroscience-based
lie detection should, now or even in the foreseeable future, necessarily
be admissible in court or used for other forensic purposes. Rather,
t David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Virginia.
This Essay was presented at the Mini-Foro on Proof and Truth in the Law, Institute for
Philosophical Research, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de M~xicQ (UNAM), as an Inau-
gural Lecture at the University of Virginia School of Law, at the Duck Conference on
Social Cognition, to the Departments of Psychology at Michigan State University and the
University of Virginia, and at the Baldy Center for Law and Social Policy at the University
of Buffalo School of Law. Many of the ideas presented here were generated during meet-
ings of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation's Law and Neuroscience Pro-
ject, whose tangible and intangible support I gratefully acknowledge. Detailed and
constructive comments by Charles Barzun, Teneille Brown, Jonathan Gradowski, Joshua
Greene, Owen Jones, Adam Kolber, Greg Mitchell, John Monahan, Peter Tillers, Lloyd
Snook, and Bobbie Spellman have made this version far better than its predecessors.

1191

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