Grinder
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2011
- Messages
- 10,033
Indeed, one may call a rose a skunk cabbage, but it would be advisable to define what one means.
Language is a matter of communication and establishing what one means by a word is important. One may indeed coin words or redefine them based on personal preference, but making the definition clear is important.
I suggest that lawyers, judges, and legislators know what "exculpatory evidence" and "proof" in the legal sense is, even if some of us are struggling with these concepts. (Legal "proof" is not the same as mathematical "proof", and is often meant by legal practitioners to simply mean "evidence"; it can also mean a "conclusive demonstration based on a body of evidence".)
I know you are struggling with the difference between the judicial system and the world outside of it. Exculpatory evidence doesn't necessarily prove innocence but of course by your standards people can start using it that way because they want to. Crazy idea that establishing what one means by a word rather than using it as it is defined is the way to better communication. If you want to coin a new word for falsifying evidence, go for it but don't go and make frame both for guilty and innocent people.
One may call a home run a sacrifice fly, but it isn't one and one would like an idiot for calling it that.
