In this article, I argue that lawmakers must abandon their previous reluctance to engage with questions of personal identity (PI). While frequently seen as an esoteric subject, of limited interest outside of academic philosophy departments, I attempt to show that, in fact, assumptions about PIand its durability in the face of certain psychological or genetic changesunderpin many current legal rules. This is most perhaps obviously exemplified with regard to reproductive technologies. Yet the Parfitian challenge to identify a victim of bad reproductive choices has been largely overlooked in framing legislative responses to such technologies. Furthermore, I argue, it is not only with regard to emerging technologies that questionable assumptions about PI play a role; legal responses to questions about the attribution of criminal responsibility, and about the treatment of demented or brain-injured people, necessitate a frank engagement with such questions. It may be, however, that a multi-faceted approach to PI, which takes account of genetic, psychological and social factorswill prove a better fit for the myriad needs of the legal system than any sort of unified theory of identity.
CITATION STYLE
Gavaghan, C. (2010). A whole new... you? ‘Personal identity’, emerging technologies and the law. Identity in the Information Society, 3(3), 423–434. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12394-010-0077-4
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