
Gifting Made Simple
Give the Gift of ChoiceClick below to purchase a Pine Centre eGift Card that can be used at participating retailers at Pine Centre.Purchase HereHome
The Problem of Personhood: Giving Rights to Trees, Corporations and Robots
Coles
Loading Inventory...
The Problem of Personhood: Giving Rights to Trees, Corporations and Robots
By None
Current price: $11.19
Original price: $13.99

Coles
The Problem of Personhood: Giving Rights to Trees, Corporations and Robots
By None
Current price: $11.19
Original price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
Should nonhumans have rights in law and politics? How personhood for corporations and everything else exploits us today.Over the last twenty-five years, the concept of personhood has become essential—to debates about providing corporations human privileges, limiting access to abortion, giving algorithms free speech protections, releasing elephants from zoos, and permitting trees the standing to sue. The Personhood Problem reveals the unsettling connections between these imagined persons and their sought-after rights, in a bracing and nuanced examination of the versions of personhood proliferating today. Synthesizing the political and philosophical debates on personhood, the book uncovers the unexpected, disturbing, and dangerous alignments between them. Telling the true and engaging story of the oldest version of “fictional” personhood—the corporate one—this book helps us rethink that history and its use, or threat, to us now.
Should nonhumans have rights in law and politics? How personhood for corporations and everything else exploits us today.Over the last twenty-five years, the concept of personhood has become essential—to debates about providing corporations human privileges, limiting access to abortion, giving algorithms free speech protections, releasing elephants from zoos, and permitting trees the standing to sue. The Personhood Problem reveals the unsettling connections between these imagined persons and their sought-after rights, in a bracing and nuanced examination of the versions of personhood proliferating today. Synthesizing the political and philosophical debates on personhood, the book uncovers the unexpected, disturbing, and dangerous alignments between them. Telling the true and engaging story of the oldest version of “fictional” personhood—the corporate one—this book helps us rethink that history and its use, or threat, to us now.




















