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DissertationDOI

Technical Legality: Law, Technology and Science Fiction

01 Jan 2010-
TL;DR: In this article, the intersections of law and technology, referred to here as technical legality, are explored through taking science fiction seriously, and it is argued that reflection on technical legality reveals the mythic of modernity.
Abstract: This thesis concerns the intersections of law and technology, referred to here as ‘technical legality’. It argues that reflection on technical legality reveals the mythic of modernity. The starting point for the argument is that the orthodox framing of technology by law – the ‘law and technology enterprise’ – does not comprehend its own speculative jurisdiction – that is, it fails to realise its oracle orientation towards imagining the future. In this science fiction as the modern West’s mythform, as the repository for projections of technological futures, is recognised as both the law and technology enterprise’s wellspring and cipher. What is offered in this thesis is a more thorough exploration of technical legality through taking science fiction seriously. This seriousness results in two implications for the understanding of technical legality. The first implication is that the anxieties and fantasies that animate the calling forth of law by technology become clearer. Science fiction operates as a window into the cultural milieu that frames law-making moments. In locating law-making events – specifically the making of the Prohibition of Human Cloning Act 2002 (Cth) and the Motor Car Act 1909 (Vic) – with the clone ‘canon’ in science fiction (specifically Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)) and H.G. Wells’ scientific romances, what is offered is a much richer understanding of how the cultural framing of technology becomes law than that provided by the ‘pragmatic’ positivism of the law and technology enterprise. The second implication arises from the excess that appears at the margins of the richer analyses. Exploring technical legality through science fiction does not remain within the epistemological frame. Each of the analyses gestures towards something essential about technical legality. The law and technology enterprise is grounded on the modern myth, which is also the myth of modernity – Frankenstein. It tells a story of monstrous technology, vulnerable humanity and saving law. The analyses of the Prohibition of Human Cloning Act 2002 (Cth) and the Motor Car Act 1909 (Vic) show that this narrative is terrorised, that the saving law turns out to be the monster in disguise; that the law called forth by technology is in itself technological. In extended readings of two critically acclaimed science fictions, Frank Herbert’s Dune cycle (1965–83) and the recent television series Battlestar Galactica (2003–10), the essential commitments of technological law are exposed. Dune as technical legality makes clear that technological law is truly monstrous, for behind its positivism and sovereignty its essence is with the alchemy of death and time. Battlestar Galactica as technical legality reduces further the alchemical properties of technical law. Battlestar Galactica moves the metaphysical highlight to the essence of technology and very nearly ends with Heidegger’s demise of Being in ‘Enframing’: monstrous technology and monstrous law reveal a humanity that cannot be saved. However, at the very moment of this fall, Battlestar Galactica collapses the metaphysical frame, affirming technological Being-in-the-world over empty ordering, life over death. This free responsibility to becoming that emerges from Battlestar Galactica reunites technical legality with the mythic of modernity. The modern denial of myth, which allowed Frankenstein to narrate technical legality, has been challenged. Free responsibility to becoming means a confidence with myths; it clears the way for the telling of new stories about law and technology.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a judge in some representative American jurisdiction is assumed to accept the main uncontroversial constitutive and regulative rules of the law in his jurisdiction and to follow earlier decisions of their court or higher courts whose rationale, as l
Abstract: 1.. HARD CASES 5. Legal Rights A. Legislation . . . We might therefore do well to consider how a philosophical judge might develop, in appropriate cases, theories of what legislative purpose and legal principles require. We shall find that he would construct these theories in the same manner as a philosophical referee would construct the character of a game. I have invented, for this purpose, a lawyer of superhuman skill, learning, patience and acumen, whom I shall call Hercules. I suppose that Hercules is a judge in some representative American jurisdiction. I assume that he accepts the main uncontroversial constitutive and regulative rules of the law in his jurisdiction. He accepts, that is, that statutes have the general power to create and extinguish legal rights, and that judges have the general duty to follow earlier decisions of their court or higher courts whose rationale, as l

2,050 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

369 citations

References
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Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose five indicia, common to most forms of virtual property, which a court should use to identify legally protectable virtual property interests on the Internet.
Abstract: Building on the analysis of Professor Joshua Fairfield, from his seminal article titled Virtual Property, this note proposes five indicia, common to most forms of virtual property, which a court should use to identify legally protectable virtual property interests on the Internet. These indicia are: (1) rivalry; (2) persistence; (3) interconnectivity; (4) secondary markets; and (5) value-added-by-users. This note cautions, however, against applying this framework indiscriminately against the interests of the very entities without whom the property would not exist. The ultimate purpose of virtual property jurisprudence should be to strike a balance that provides legal redress to users whose legitimate property interests have been violated while simultaneously reducing liability and disincentives to service providers who promote and sustain the growth of the Internet.

22 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...315 Miller (2003); Grimmelmann (2004); Jankowich (2006); Westbrook (2006) Blazer (2006); Chen (2006); Horowitz (2007); Holdaway (2007); Jacob Rogers (2007); Hunt (2007); Chin (2007); Marcus (2007), Sheldon (2007); Caramore (2008); Meek-Prieto (2008); Rosette (2008); Kunze (2008); Passman (2008);…...

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  • ...220 Lastowka and Hunter (2004), cited by Katsh (2004), p 289; Jankowich (2005), p 176; Kayser (2006), p 60; Blazer (2006), p 139; Mayer-Schönberger and Crowley (2006), p 1801; Glushko (2007), p 512; Chin (2007), p 1305; Lederman (2007), p 1621; Sheldon (2007), p 760; Holdaway (2007), p 2; Reuveni…...

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  • ...198 Castronova (2001), cited by Jankowich (2005), p 176; Fairfield (2005), p 1050; Blazer (2006), p 138; Kayser (2006), p 60; Glushko (2007), p 507; Archinaco (2007), p 25; Sheldon (2007), p 754; Holdaway (2007), pp 1–2; Reuveni (2007), p 267; Macrae (2008), p 325....

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Book
06 Jul 1995
TL;DR: Ben-Tov as mentioned in this paper posits that science fiction is an American "national mode of thinking" which seeks to replace nature with technological worlds paradoxically, in hope of regaining a mythic, magical American Eden.
Abstract: ""The Artificial Paradise" shows how science fiction is a powerful purveyor of cultural myths rooted in the history of the West, myths that shape American attitudes toward nature, technology, and the pursuit of happiness. Sharona Ben-Tov posits the theory that science fiction is an American "national mode of thinking" which seeks to replace nature with technological worlds- paradoxically, in hope of regaining a mythic, magical American Eden. Science fiction imagery- from fifties sci-fi through women's sci-fi and cyberpunk- keeps alive the desires of and anxieties born during the Scientific Revolution, when the Western view of nature changed radically. Ben-Tov discusses sci-fi classics like "Dune," "The Dispossessed," "Neuromancer," Vonnegut's fiction, and the "Aliens" movie in relation to ancient and modern myths of nature, to scientific projects like the atom bomb, Strategic Defense Initiative, robotics, virtual reality, and to cultural psychology.The book will appeal to those interested in popular culture, literature, and feminist studies. It will also enchant general readers who are interested in science fiction, especially readers who want to understand more about the relationship between technology and society.""The Artificial Paradise" sets out to map the cultural anxieties that have beset Western thinking since the Scientific Revolution, and to investigate the ills that flow from the split in Western thinking between nature and culture and subject and object, and how the split is expressed and reinforced in popular culture and particularly in written science fiction. . . . [A] thought-provoking, wide-ranging book written in an admirably lucid style."--Sarah Lefanu, author of Feminism and Science Fiction"The examination of America's uneasy relationship with nature is an illuminating approach which draws together science fiction studies and American studies. The witty and readable style should attract a wide readership."--Brian Attebery, Idaho State University""The Artificial Paradise" is at once intellectually provocative, knowledgeable, and literate. As our lives become increasingly determined by technology, we will need to turn to such thinkers as Dr. Ben- Tov to guide us through its dangers and pleasures."--Alan Lightman, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologySharona Ben-Tov is Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and English, Bowling Green State University. She is author of "During Ceasefire" (Harper-Collins), a book of poems.

21 citations


Additional excerpts

  • ...On the cyborg for technofeminism, see Cadora (1995), p 370; Lykke (1996), pp 13–29; Ben-Tov (1995), pp 135–166; Bailey and Telford (2007), pp 255–258....

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Book
01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: The second volume in the Law and Government series as mentioned in this paper is a study of the interaction of law and the process of government in New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland, Australia, from 1850 to 1900, or during the period between the advent of responsible government and federation.
Abstract: The second volume in the Law and Government series, this is a study of the interaction of law and the process of government in New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland, Australia, from 1850 to 1900, or during the period between the advent of responsible government and federation.

21 citations

Book
01 Jan 1897
TL;DR: A dazzling mind and driving ambition has carried Griffin into territory never before explored: he has discovered how to make himself invisible as discussed by the authors. Yet even as Griffin attains his dream, his nightmare begins.
Abstract: A dazzling mind and driving ambition has carried Griffin into territory never before explored: he has discovered how to make himself invisible. What sacrifice now can be too great? Yet even as Griffin attains his dream, his nightmare begins. This edition contains an introduction, notes, selected criticism and chronology of Well's life and times.

21 citations