| The premise seems flawed. From the paper: “we find that the LLM adheres to the legally correct outcome significantly more often than human judges” That presupposes that a “legally correct” outcome exists The Common Law, which is the foundation of federal law and the law of 49/50 states, is a “bottom up” legal system. Legal principals flow from the specific to the general. That is, judges decided specific cases based on the merits of that individual case. General principles are derived from lots of specific examples. This is different from the Civil Law used in most of Europe, which is top-down. Rulings in specific cases are derived from statutory principles. In the US system, there isn’t really a “correct legal outcome”. Common Law heavily relies on “Juris Prudence”. That is, we have a system that defers to the opinions of “important people”. So, there isn’t a “correct” legal outcome. |
The legal issue they were testing in this experiment is choice of law and procedure question, which is governed by a line of cases starting with Erie Railroad in which Justice Brandies famously said, "There is no federal common law."