Is it better that ten guilty persons go free than that one innocent person be convicted?
Criminal Justice Ethics 23 (2):3-13 (2004)
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Lynne Rudder Baker (2008). “Tätigsein Und Die Erste-Person-Perspektive” (Agency and the First-Person Perspective). In Bruno Niederbacher & Edmund Runggaldier (eds.), Was Sind Menschliche Personen? Onto Verlag.
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David Hodgson (2005). A Plain Person's Free Will. Journal of Consciousness Studies 12 (1):3-19.
Stelios C. Zyglidopoulos & Peter J. Fleming (2008). Ethical Distance in Corrupt Firms: How Do Innocent Bystanders Become Guilty Perpetrators? Journal of Business Ethics 78 (1-2):265 - 274.
Larry Alexander (1983). Retributivism and the Inadvertent Punishment of the Innocent. Law and Philosophy 2 (2):233 - 246.
Mark C. Murphy (2009). Not Penal Substitution but Vicarious Punishment. Faith and Philosophy 26 (3):253-273.
Juha Räikkä (2006). When a Person Feels That She Is Guilty and Believes That She Is Not Guilty. The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 9:149-152.
Jeffrey Reiman & Ernest Den Haavang (1990). On the Common Saying That It is Better That Ten Guilty Persons Escape Than That One Innocent Suffer: Pro and Con. Social Philosophy and Policy 7 (02):226-.
Richard L. Lippke (2011). Punishing the Guilty, Not Punishing the Innocent. Journal of Moral Philosophy 7 (4):462-488.
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