Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination

The legal conception and interpretation of the subject of law have long been challenged by different theoretical backgrounds: from the feminist critiques of the patriarchal nature of law and its subjects to the Marxist critiques of its capitalist ideological nature and the anti-racist critiques of i...

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Main Author: Ana Oliveira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Laws
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/9/2/10
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spelling doaj-3d57198e90834bfaa767acba86b515152020-11-25T02:05:23ZengMDPI AGLaws2075-471X2020-03-019101010.3390/laws9020010Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal ImaginationAna Oliveira0Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, 3000-995 Coimbra, PortugalThe legal conception and interpretation of the subject of law have long been challenged by different theoretical backgrounds: from the feminist critiques of the patriarchal nature of law and its subjects to the Marxist critiques of its capitalist ideological nature and the anti-racist critiques of its colonial nature. These perspectives are, in turn, challenged by anarchist, queer, and crip conceptions that, while compelling a critical return to the subject, the structure and the law also serve as an inspiration for arguments that deplete the structures and render them hostages of the sovereignty of the subject’ self-fiction. <i>Identity Wars</i> (a possible epithet for this political and epistemological battle to establish meaning through which power is exercised) have, for their part, been challenged by a renewed axiological consensus, here introduced by posthuman critical theory: species hierarchy and anthropocentric exceptionalism. As concepts and matter, questioning human exceptionalism has created new legal issues: from ecosexual weddings with the sea, the sun, or a horse; to human rights of animals; to granting legal personhood to <i>nature</i>; to human rights of machines, inter alia the right to (or not to) consent. Part of a wider movement on legal theory, which extends the notion of legal subjectivity to non-human agents, the subject is increasingly in <i>trouble</i>. From Science Fiction to hyperrealist materialism, this paper intends to signal some of the normative problems introduced, firstly, by the sovereignty of the subject’s self-fiction; and, secondly, by the anthropomorphization of high-tech robotics.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/9/2/10subject self-fictionsex-robotsposthuman
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Oliveira
spellingShingle Ana Oliveira
Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
Laws
subject self-fiction
sex-robots
posthuman
author_facet Ana Oliveira
author_sort Ana Oliveira
title Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
title_short Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
title_full Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
title_fullStr Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
title_full_unstemmed Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination
title_sort subject (in) trouble: humans, robots, and legal imagination
publisher MDPI AG
series Laws
issn 2075-471X
publishDate 2020-03-01
description The legal conception and interpretation of the subject of law have long been challenged by different theoretical backgrounds: from the feminist critiques of the patriarchal nature of law and its subjects to the Marxist critiques of its capitalist ideological nature and the anti-racist critiques of its colonial nature. These perspectives are, in turn, challenged by anarchist, queer, and crip conceptions that, while compelling a critical return to the subject, the structure and the law also serve as an inspiration for arguments that deplete the structures and render them hostages of the sovereignty of the subject’ self-fiction. <i>Identity Wars</i> (a possible epithet for this political and epistemological battle to establish meaning through which power is exercised) have, for their part, been challenged by a renewed axiological consensus, here introduced by posthuman critical theory: species hierarchy and anthropocentric exceptionalism. As concepts and matter, questioning human exceptionalism has created new legal issues: from ecosexual weddings with the sea, the sun, or a horse; to human rights of animals; to granting legal personhood to <i>nature</i>; to human rights of machines, inter alia the right to (or not to) consent. Part of a wider movement on legal theory, which extends the notion of legal subjectivity to non-human agents, the subject is increasingly in <i>trouble</i>. From Science Fiction to hyperrealist materialism, this paper intends to signal some of the normative problems introduced, firstly, by the sovereignty of the subject’s self-fiction; and, secondly, by the anthropomorphization of high-tech robotics.
topic subject self-fiction
sex-robots
posthuman
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/9/2/10
work_keys_str_mv AT anaoliveira subjectintroublehumansrobotsandlegalimagination
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