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    A case where the agreement and the verdict cannot be simu... — Carmelics
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    Part of a larger discussion

    Supports→The judges were not obliged to refrain from passing judgment in the case of Protagoras versus Euathlus.

    A case where the agreement and the verdict cannot be simultaneously enforced reveals a genuine gap in legal competence, not merely a rhetorical puzzle resolvable by clever framing.

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    Key Terms

    Agreement(as used in philosophy of law)
    In legal contexts, a binding contract or mutual understanding between parties about what they will or won't do.
    Genuine gap(Whether there's a true difference between 'accuracy-plus-adroitness' and 'aptness')
    A real, meaningful difference between two concepts or theories, not just a surface-level distinction.
    Legal competence(as used in philosophy of law)
    The authority and power that a court or legal system has to make decisions and enforce rules in certain situations.
    Rhetorical puzzle(as used in philosophy of law)
    A problem that seems confusing only because of how it's worded or presented, but can be cleared up by explaining things differently.
    Verdict(as used in legal and healthcare contexts)

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    An official decision or judgment, typically a clear yes-or-no answer rather than something in between.

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    Justice & Punishment1 linked

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    The judges were not obliged to refrain from passing judgment in the case of Prot...

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