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Presumption

Presumption is a belief or conclusion that something is true based on probability, evidence, or authority, without requiring direct or complete proof. In everyday language, people act on presumptions to guide decisions. In formal contexts such as law and logic, a presumption is a rule or principle that a fact exists or a consequence follows unless opposing evidence is introduced.

In law, presumptions allocate the burden of proof or rationalize outcomes. They can be conclusive (irrebuttable),

Presumptions play a central role in criminal and civil proceedings. Presumption of innocence requires the state

Critics warn that presumptions can perpetuate injustice if left unchecked, particularly when irrebuttable or outdated. Rebuttable

meaning
the
fact
is
accepted
as
true
regardless
of
contrary
evidence,
or
rebuttable,
allowing
evidence
to
overcome
the
presumption.
Two
broad
categories
are
presumption
of
law
and
presumption
of
fact.
Presumption
of
law
imposes
a
legal
conclusion;
presumption
of
fact
arises
from
common
experience
or
probabilistic
reasoning
about
a
situation.
to
prove
guilt
rather
than
the
defendant
proving
innocence.
Other
examples
include
the
presumption
of
legitimacy
for
children
born
to
married
parents,
and
the
presumption
of
regularity
in
official
acts.
In
civil
cases,
presumptions
can
affect
who
bears
the
burden
of
proof
or
what
conclusions
are
considered
likely.
presumptions
provide
a
mechanism
to
adjust
beliefs
in
light
of
new
evidence,
while
many
legal
systems
require
explicit
standards
of
proof,
such
as
beyond
a
reasonable
doubt
or
preponderance
of
the
evidence.
Presumption
thus
functions
as
a
tool
to
streamline
reasoning
while
remaining
subject
to
challenge.