Sunday, May 10, 2020


Will the first to automate law have a winning differentiation?
Is Law Computable? From Rule of Law to Legal Singularity
What does computable law mean for the autonomy, authority, and legitimacy of the legal system? Are we witnessing a shift from Rule of Law to a new Rule of Technology? Should we even build these things in the first place?
This unique volume collects original papers by a group of leading international scholars to address some of the fascinating questions raised by the encroachment of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into more aspects of legal process, administration, and culture. Weighing near-term benefits against the longer-term, and potentially path-dependent, implications of replacing human legal authority with computational systems, this volume pushes back against the more uncritical accounts of AI in law and the eagerness of scholars, governments, and LegalTech developers, to overlook the more fundamental - and perhaps 'bigger picture' - ramifications of computable law.
This paper is the introductory chapter of Is Law Computable? Critical Perspectives on Law + Artificial Intelligence (Hart 2020).




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Tech Support a la Dilbert.



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