疼痛作为一种事实和启发式:疼痛神经成像如何阐明法律的道德维度。

IF 2.5 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Cornell Law Review Pub Date : 2012-05-01
Amanda C Pustilnik
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在从侵权到酷刑等法律领域,疼痛及其程度通过划定合法性和权利的界限发挥了重要的定义作用。然而,尽管疼痛作为一个术语在法律文本和实践中所做的所有工作,但它缺乏外部可验证性,这令人困惑。现在,神经成像技术使疼痛和无数其他主观状态至少在一定程度上是可以确定的。这种新兴的确定和量化主观状态的能力正在促使法学研究转向“享乐主义”或“主观主义”,这引发了一场激烈的辩论,即主观状态的量化是否会影响法律理论和实践。主观主义者认为,法律中的许多价值对话是对主观状态的定量确定的必要但可怜的替代品——这种确定在法律的“经验未来”中是可能的。本文提出了相反的观点:法律中的痛苦话语往往是价值观的启发式。通过对神经影像学研究人员的访谈和实验室访问,这篇文章显示了目前和原则上通过神经影像学量化疼痛的局限性。然后,它提出了关于酷刑的案例研究——谋杀、酷刑、死刑和堕胎,以显示法律中痛苦话语的启发式作用。文章介绍了“具身道德”理论,描述了权利和义务的道德观念是如何受到人类肉体的影响,并受到移情认同的限制的约束。疼痛神经成像有助于揭示法律中疼痛的双重事实和启发式性质,因此它本身就指出了神经成像影响(更不用说改变)法律实践和理论所需的翻译工作。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pain as a fact and heuristic: how pain neuroimaging illuminates moral dimensions of law.

In legal domains ranging from tort to torture, pain and its degree do important definitional work by delimiting boundaries of lawfulness and of entitlements. Yet, for all the work done by pain as a term in legal texts and practice, it has a confounding lack of external verifiability. Now, neuroimaging is rendering pain and myriad other subjective states at least partly ascertainable. This emerging ability to ascertain and quantify subjective states is prompting a "hedonic" or a "subjectivist" turn in legal scholarship, which has sparked a vigorous debate as to whether the quantification of subjective states might affect legal theory and practice. Subjectivists contend that much values-talk in law has been a necessary but poor substitute for quantitative determinations of subjective states--determinations that will be possible in the law's "experiential future." This Article argues the converse: that pain discourse in law frequently is a heuristic for values. Drawing on interviews and laboratory visits with neuroimaging researchers, this Article shows current and in-principle limitations of pain quantification through neuroimaging. It then presents case studies on torture-murder, torture, the death penalty, and abortion to show the largely heuristic role of pain discourse in law. Introducing the theory of "embodied morality," the Article describes how moral conceptions of rights and duties are informed by human physicality and constrained by the limits of empathic identification. Pain neuroimaging helps reveal this dual factual and heuristic nature of pain in the law, and thus itself points to the translational work required for neuroimaging to influence, much less transform, legal practice and doctrine.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Founded in 1915, the Cornell Law Review is a student-run and student-edited journal that strives to publish novel scholarship that will have an immediate and lasting impact on the legal community. The Cornell Law Review publishes six issues annually consisting of articles, essays, book reviews, and student notes.
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