The Philosophy of Digital Law: Ethical Foundations for Human Dignity and Sovereignty in the Technological Era

Published: 10 March 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/ym3wdvhpdm.1
Contributor:
Reginaldo Cordeiro Barros II

Description

Abstract Digital transformation has profoundly impacted social, political, and legal structures, particularly regarding privacy and individual autonomy. This paper proposes a philosophical foundation for Digital Law, inspired by Kant, Locke, and Aristotle, addressing issues such as digital sovereignty, ethical governance, and data monetization. The research explores the need for fair and balanced regulation that protects individual rights without hindering technological progress.

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Steps to reproduce

This study is based on theoretical and philosophical analysis of Digital Law, sovereignty, and ethical governance, drawing from classical and contemporary legal philosophy. As such, it does not involve empirical experimentation or datasets that require direct reproduction. However, the conceptual framework and philosophical arguments presented can be applied and expanded in future research on digital law, data protection, and AI regulation.

Institutions

Centro Universitario Mauricio de Nassau

Categories

Law, Constitutional Law

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