ABSTRACT

Situating privacy within the context of political philosophy, this book highlights the way in which struggles concerning the meaning of privacy have always been political. Different conceptions of privacy are here shown to involve diverse assumptions about ontology: our conceptions of self, culture, society and communication. Privacy theory’s debt to Locke, Kant or Mill, and what is at stake in their conceptual frameworks, is examined. The extent to which the term "privacy" has been used to the detriment of - and to create - weaker parties in marriage, in the workplace and now as citizens (or non-citizens) and consumers, as well as employees, is also demonstrated. In contrast, Janice Richardson pursues the relevance of Floridi’s philosophy of information, before turning to her application of Spinoza, the philosopher of communication, in order to outline a more useful framework through which to think about privacy today. The book will be of interest to those working in political philosophy, feminist philosophy, law, the philosophy of information, sociology, media, and cultural studies.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Defining privacy

The contemporary ‘liberal canon’ and its debt to Locke, Kant and Mill

chapter 2|20 pages

Privacy and the law

The background

chapter 3|27 pages

Autonomy, selfhood and privacy

chapter 4|27 pages

Locke

Privacy, property in the person, memory and selfhood

chapter 5|30 pages

Privacy as a commodity

Richard Posner

chapter 6|24 pages

Philosophy of information and privacy

Luciano Floridi

chapter 7|30 pages

Spinoza

An immanent ethics of privacy

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion