one proposed thought which is widely understood as "law is blind" .
how are you suppose to justify the irony established between the explanation of one thought in two different ways ?
the law is blind to help people get justice without any partiality or the law is blind that its inability to decipher and see who is right and who wrong has eventually evaded.
Some times i feel the the symbolism relevance of the white statue standing with a balancing scale in its hand having its eyes blind folded , now holds no importance if its pointing towards any optimistic thought or image creation of that sorts in the minds of masses , it has failed miserably.
When I saw the statue the 1st thing I interpreted was surprisingly totally in contradiction to
what it is required to portray . with increasing conclusions and judgments of injustice all i could think was how rightly the "Kaanoon" itself portrays that it is blind and nor does it want to make and effort to open its eyes and see who is right and deserving .
The lady probably would one day want to cut open the blindfold herself to see whats going on .
The connotation now perceived is truly justifying the state of affairs .I would be hard to change! Either change the blind figurine or go one to one to give an explanation of its purpose of being there , Either turn the face or open the its eyes , probably then we could relate. what is "kaanoon" the law , that serves for us
6 comments:
the thought is good but its lacks content , with example .
absolute nonsense...uff!!
i like the title.
Sight connects us powerfully to the outside world ,this symbol tells the law to confine itself to law only and not look at anything outside law .
Symbols have a way of conveying the basic paradigm.
It can as well be without blindfold suggesting alertness as we change our basic assumption & become fully aware of limitations of Law .
yo!!!! so true
This has absolutely no founding whatsoever. The idea of the "veil of ignorance" is not something simply fabricated. Look up John Rawls and is theory of justice.
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