Decoding Images
The law’s a wordy thing, but from time to time it resorts to images to get its point across, as we’ve pointed out occasionally here on Slaw. The idea is, most often, that an image or a graphic representation can be taken in all at once — as a gestalt — which is assumed to happen more quickly than the decoding that takes place as we move (leaping, it turns out) through a text from left to right. This is one reason graphic laws find themselves on traffic signs.
But what seems obvious to one observer — the “draftsperson,” say . . . [more]
