Can a False Report Be Legally Truthful? Peirce, Journalism, and the Pursuit of Knowledge
Introduction: A Legal and Philosophical Paradox Can a false report be faithful ? At first glance, the question appears self-contradictory. If a newspaper publishes inaccurate information, common sense suggests that the report cannot be true. Yet democratic legal systems have long recognized a distinction between factual error and irresponsible reporting. Under certain circumstances, journalists may receive legal protection even when parts of their reporting later prove incorrect. This distinction rests on a broader insight about the nature of knowledge itself. Reporters rarely observe every event they describe firsthand. Instead, they reconstruct what happened from documents, photographs, testimony, official records, and other forms of evidence. The challenge is not simply to discover the truth but to investigate it under conditions of uncertainty. More than a century before contemporary debates about media responsibility, Charles Sanders Peirce developed a theory of inqui...