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Folk Concepts and the Effective Regulation of New Technologies

Abstract

One argument that is at times adduced against proposals for legal change, such as granting personhood to autonomous agents, is that the change in question will be inefficacious if it takes the law too far from the folk world of people. By contrast, in this article we argue that legal concepts and folk concepts are more malleable than we tend to assume. We turn to (legal) history to demonstrate that the relationship between legal concepts and folk concepts is not one-directional, which means that changes in the law can and have influenced folk psychology as well as vice versa. This has implications for debates around the regulation of new technologies: the ‘lack of efficacy’ argument is not a strong one and mere reference to current folk concepts cannot suffice in such debates. Moreover, the efficacy argument does not, and cannot, replace normative arguments in this respect, so the malleability of folk concepts needs to be considered by legal decision-makers. Current conceptual apparatuses (legal or folk) are not immutable, and reification of the current status quo should not be presupposed.

Published: 2024-04-30
Pages:75 to 87
Section: Articles
How to Cite
Lenaerts, Mariken, and Antonia M Waltermann. 2024. “Folk Concepts and the Effective Regulation of New Technologies”. Law, Technology and Humans 6 (1):75-87. https://doi.org/10.5204/lthj.2794.

Author Biographies

Maastricht University
Netherlands Netherlands

Mariken Lenaerts is Assistant Professor at the Department of Foundations and Methods of Law. Her expertise includes legal history, legal philosophy and family law. In 2012, she defended her dissertation titled National Socialist Family Law. The influence of National Socialism on marriage and divorce law in Germany and the Netherlands. In October 2013, her dissertation was awarded the Prix Fondation Auschwitz – Jacques Rozenberg. Her current research focuses on the possible implementation of permaculture ethics into law.

Maastricht University
Netherlands Netherlands

Antonia M. Waltermann is Assistant Professor of legal theory and philosophy at Maastricht University. She received her PhD in April 2016 for her thesis Sovereignties, a conceptual analysis and rational reconstruction of the concept of sovereignty, now published in Springer's Law and Philosophy Library. Her current research focuses on non-human agents and the social construction of (legal) reality.

Open Access Journal
ISSN 2652-4074