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This book redefines legal philosophy in the age of data and artificial intelligence. It argues that law can no longer function as a closed system of fixed norms but must be re-imagined as a living act rooted in human existence. Moving beyond procedure, the text emphasizes the dialectic of necessity and freedom, reason and experience, means and ends, justice and injustice. It critiques the alienation produced when law becomes a technocratic tool and highlights the need to ground it in vulnerable bodies, collective memory, and creativity. In doing so, it presents law not as an instrument of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book redefines legal philosophy in the age of data and artificial intelligence. It argues that law can no longer function as a closed system of fixed norms but must be re-imagined as a living act rooted in human existence. Moving beyond procedure, the text emphasizes the dialectic of necessity and freedom, reason and experience, means and ends, justice and injustice. It critiques the alienation produced when law becomes a technocratic tool and highlights the need to ground it in vulnerable bodies, collective memory, and creativity. In doing so, it presents law not as an instrument of domination but as an open process-unfinished, dialogical, and transformative. Justice, the book insists, is never a final destination but a continuous reconstruction that restores forgotten voices and resists algorithmic closure. By placing real human beings at the center, it calls for a humane legal system that protects dignity, nurtures freedom, and sparks creativity in the globalized AI society.
Autorenporträt
Nguyen Anh Quoc, born in 1972 in Dak Lak, Vietnam, is currently teaching human philosophy and social philosophy; participating in teaching undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students majoring in philosophy.