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The Imputable Cause Theory refines how law determines responsibility beyond mere causation. Unlike adequate causation, it asks whether someone created a legally prohibited risk and whether that risk actually caused the harm. Through examples like childbirth and traffic accidents, we know that the law focuses not just on causal links but on the social and legal purpose behind responsibility — distinguishing natural causation from moral and legal judgment.
By Sêng-Gān
The Imputable Cause Theory refines how law determines responsibility beyond mere causation. Unlike adequate causation, it asks whether someone created a legally prohibited risk and whether that risk actually caused the harm. Through examples like childbirth and traffic accidents, we know that the law focuses not just on causal links but on the social and legal purpose behind responsibility — distinguishing natural causation from moral and legal judgment.