CRIM 220 Lecture 1: Ch. 1
Document Summary
Chapte(cid:396) 1 c(cid:396)i(cid:373)e, c(cid:396)i(cid:373)i(cid:374)al justice, a(cid:374)d scie(cid:374)tific i(cid:374)(cid:395)ui(cid:396)y. Experiential reality things we know from direct experience. Agreement reality things we consider real because we"ve been told they"re real and everyone else seems to agree they"re real. E. g. , preventive police patrol police do not prevent all crime but it is a commonsense belief that police visibility will prevent some crimes. Empirical: knowledge based on experience and observation. Assertion must have both logical and empirical support. It must make sense and it must agree with actual observations. Methodology: science of finding out, methods used to understand something. Culture made up of firmly accepted knowledge. Spared from starting from scratch but may hinder human inquiry. Trust the judgment of experts with credentials in the face of contradictory arguments. We are sloppy observers fail to observe things right in front of us. Assuming that a few similar events are evidence of a general pattern.