Justice, the Digital Revolution, Society and the Individual
Autor Bruno Zeller, Mirella Athertonen Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 noi 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004702684
ISBN-10: 9004702687
Pagini: 215
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
ISBN-10: 9004702687
Pagini: 215
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Notă biografică
Bruno Zeller, Ph.D., is a Professor and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Western Australia. He has published monographs and articles on transnational legal issues.
Mirella Atherton, Ph.D., is an academic at the University of Newcastle, Australia. While lecturing and researching she specialises in Banking and Finance Law and has a special interest in personal data.
Mirella Atherton, Ph.D., is an academic at the University of Newcastle, Australia. While lecturing and researching she specialises in Banking and Finance Law and has a special interest in personal data.
Cuprins
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Part 1
The Legal Theories
1Introduction
1 Drivers of Change
2 The Communication Dilemma
3 The Effects of Elites
4 A Look Back into History
5 The Digital Environment
6 The Attention Economy
7 What Next?
2Lessons from History
1 Introduction
2 Historical Developments of Societal Theories
3 Hegel and the Social Order
4 Marx, Fetishism and the Notion of Justice
5 Fetishism of Commodities
6 The Concept of Justice
7 Conclusion
3The Drivers of Instability
1 Introduction
2 Social Well-Being
3 The Wealth Pump
4 Overproduction of Degrees
5 The Ruling Class
6 State Breakdowns
7 Conclusion
4The New World Order
1 Introduction
2 The Economic Background
3 The End of Globalisation
4 The Economy and the Principle of Justice
5 The Digital Revolution
6 Conclusion
Part 2
Transformation of Society
5The Social Construction of Reality
1 Introduction
2 Social Construction
3 Institutionalisation
3.1Reification
3.2Origin of Institutionalisation
4 Constructivism
4.1The Social Construction of Reality
4.2Reality
5 The Contribution
6 Conclusion
6Rawls Liberal Political Theory
1 Introduction
1.1Rawls Theory of Justice
2 Rawls Theory of Justice
3 The Social Sphere
4 Nussbaum Analysis of Rawls
5 Friedman’s Freedom
6 Critical Analysis by Other Philosophers
7 Conclusion
Part 3
Preserving Individual Identity
7The Digital Social World
1 Introduction
2 The Social World
3 Online Social Networks
4 The Social World and Legislation
5 Democracy
6 Stratification and Knowledge Distribution
7 Conclusion
8Justice and ai
1 European Union ai Legislation
1.1Ethical Considerations
2 The Sociotechnical System
3 Habitualisation
4 The Fairness Loophole
5 ai Accuracy
6 False Information
7 Artificial Intelligence Moral Control Problems
8 Conclusion
Part 4
The Balance of Power
9Power Structures
1 Introduction
2 The Construction and Constitution of Power
3 Education and the Digital Divide
4 The Power of Education
4.1The Process of Education
5 Educational Reform
6 Soft Power, Constraints and Forces
7 Shaping Realities through Social Constructionism
7.1Bourdieu, Berger and Luckmann, and the Social Constructivism
8 Constructivism in International Relations
9 Conclusion
10The Fading Line between Humans and Machines
1 Introduction
2 Looking Backwards
3 Back to the Future
4 The Question of Transhumanism
5 Transhumanism in Education
6 The Legal Aspect of a Person
7 Autonomous ai or the Non-biological Machine
8 Conclusion
11Conclusions
1 The Digital Revolution
2 Extrinsic and Intrinsic Adherence to Rawls
3 Economic Interests
4 The Legal Input
Index
Acknowledgements
Part 1
The Legal Theories
1Introduction
1 Drivers of Change
2 The Communication Dilemma
3 The Effects of Elites
4 A Look Back into History
5 The Digital Environment
6 The Attention Economy
7 What Next?
2Lessons from History
1 Introduction
2 Historical Developments of Societal Theories
3 Hegel and the Social Order
4 Marx, Fetishism and the Notion of Justice
5 Fetishism of Commodities
6 The Concept of Justice
7 Conclusion
3The Drivers of Instability
1 Introduction
2 Social Well-Being
3 The Wealth Pump
4 Overproduction of Degrees
5 The Ruling Class
6 State Breakdowns
7 Conclusion
4The New World Order
1 Introduction
2 The Economic Background
3 The End of Globalisation
4 The Economy and the Principle of Justice
5 The Digital Revolution
6 Conclusion
Part 2
Transformation of Society
5The Social Construction of Reality
1 Introduction
2 Social Construction
3 Institutionalisation
3.1Reification
3.2Origin of Institutionalisation
4 Constructivism
4.1The Social Construction of Reality
4.2Reality
5 The Contribution
6 Conclusion
6Rawls Liberal Political Theory
1 Introduction
1.1Rawls Theory of Justice
2 Rawls Theory of Justice
3 The Social Sphere
4 Nussbaum Analysis of Rawls
5 Friedman’s Freedom
6 Critical Analysis by Other Philosophers
7 Conclusion
Part 3
Preserving Individual Identity
7The Digital Social World
1 Introduction
2 The Social World
3 Online Social Networks
4 The Social World and Legislation
5 Democracy
6 Stratification and Knowledge Distribution
7 Conclusion
8Justice and ai
1 European Union ai Legislation
1.1Ethical Considerations
2 The Sociotechnical System
3 Habitualisation
4 The Fairness Loophole
5 ai Accuracy
6 False Information
7 Artificial Intelligence Moral Control Problems
8 Conclusion
Part 4
The Balance of Power
9Power Structures
1 Introduction
2 The Construction and Constitution of Power
3 Education and the Digital Divide
4 The Power of Education
4.1The Process of Education
5 Educational Reform
6 Soft Power, Constraints and Forces
7 Shaping Realities through Social Constructionism
7.1Bourdieu, Berger and Luckmann, and the Social Constructivism
8 Constructivism in International Relations
9 Conclusion
10The Fading Line between Humans and Machines
1 Introduction
2 Looking Backwards
3 Back to the Future
4 The Question of Transhumanism
5 Transhumanism in Education
6 The Legal Aspect of a Person
7 Autonomous ai or the Non-biological Machine
8 Conclusion
11Conclusions
1 The Digital Revolution
2 Extrinsic and Intrinsic Adherence to Rawls
3 Economic Interests
4 The Legal Input
Index