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Volume 2, Issue 3
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Past Imperfect: Ancient Legal Codes and Future Transbeman Law - Precedents, Problems & ParadoxesProfessor Sam N. Lehman-WilzigPage 2 of 5 The ancients were not stupid: they could well see that people they considered to be inferior (sub-human) were not 1) Animals: It may seem strange to start off a list of human categories with animals, but there are two good reasons why I do so. The second reason will become obvious a little while later; the first reason is the principle found in some legal systems (like the ancient Jewish) between “dangerous” (e.g. a goring ox) and non-dangerous animals (e.g. docile sheep). The former demanded a much higher level of supervision by its master, whereas the latter did not. In other words, ancient law ascribed consciousness to animals (otherwise no supervision would be necessary at all) but not volition, the ability to choose one’s behavior – we knew in advance which animal would behave in a certain way.
An animal that attacks a predator in self-defense is making a volitional decision, but we would probably argue that it is instinctual and thus not a result of “real” free will. However, how much of what humans do is devoid of “instinct”, “reflex” or “unconscious” behavior (this can include hormonally driven action; “brainwashing” – otherwise called “education”; brain configuration as a result of individual genetic makeup; etc.)? In the case of future AI Transbemans – as in ancient law – I think the distinction between consciousness and volition will be critical, for once the latter enters the picture we will have crossed the Rubicon [1] from treating the Transbeman entity as some form of animal to a being of a higher order, from which we have to find other legal categories. 2) Slaves: Here we find several legal systems with varying approaches to the abilities and liability of such “entities”. Jewish Law held that masters are not liable for their slave’s injurious actions because slaves have the ability to understand the consequences of their behavior. Roman law accepted this principle for criminal liability but not for civil liability. American slave law followed this too, and even banned civil liability if the slave caused harm in defending himself! 3) Diminished Capacity: English Common Law [2] distinguished between two types of human adults who had less than full legal rights. First, those with a “Mental Deficiency”, such as retarded and otherwise intellectually handicapped people (e.g. stroke victims); second, those with a “Mental Disease”, such as insanity, hallucinations, Footnotes 1. Rubicon - "Crossing the Rubicon" is a popular idiom meaning to go past a point of no return; the river was a Roman boundary between Cisalpine Gaul and Italy. 2. English Common Law - a type of legal system in which the law is created and/or refined by courts on a case-by-case basis.
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