In law, moral (or "virtual") certainty has been associated with
verdicts based on certainty
beyond a reasonable doubt. Legal debate about instructions to seek a moral certainty has turned on the changing definitions of the phrase over time. Whereas it
can be understood as an equivalent to "beyond reasonable doubt", in another sense, moral certainty refers to a firm conviction which
does not correlate but rather opposes evidentiary certainty: i.e. one may have a firm subjective gut feeling of guilta feeling of moral certaintywithout the evidence necessarily justifying a guilty conviction. ==See also==