Understanding Social Control and Constitutional Inference

Revision sheet excerpt

Course Outline

  1. Social Control Modalities
  2. US Constitution as AI System
  3. Inference Process
  4. Declaration of Independence
  5. Statehood and Sovereignty
  6. US Constitutional Structure
  7. Separation of Powers
  8. Checks and Balances
  9. Federalism Principles
  10. Constitutional Amendments

1. Social Control Modalities

Key Concepts & Definitions

Laws: Formal rules enacted by authorized institutions that prescribe or prohibit specific behaviors, often backed by sanctions or penalties. Laws are primary modalities of social control that operate through codified regulations and legal systems. Lessig (2006): Laws are explicit rules that impose duties and confer powers, shaping individual and collective conduct.

Norms: Informal social expectations and shared standards of behavior that are maintained through social approval or disapproval. Norms influence behavior without formal enforcement mechanisms and are crucial in regulating social interactions. Lessig (2006): Norms serve as social modalities that constrain actions through social pressure rather than legal sanctions.

Markets: Economic mechanisms that influence behavior through incentives, prices, and resource allocations. Markets act as social control by shaping choices and priorities based on economic self-interest. Lessig (2006): Markets are modalities of control that guide behavior via economic incentives, often aligning individual interests with collective outcomes.

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Quiz preview

1. What is a 'norm' in the context of social control modalities?

2. According to the OECD, what is an AI system?

3. What is the primary role of the inference process in systems like the US Constitution viewed as an AI system?

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Flashcards preview

Social Control Modalities — definition?

Laws, norms, markets, architecture regulate behavior.

US Constitution as AI — role?

Processes inputs to produce societal outputs via inference.

Inference process — mechanism?

Drawing conclusions from evidence or premises.

Declaration of Independence — purpose?

Declare US sovereignty and justify separation from Britain.

Statehood — Vattel’s view?

Self-governing, independent, sovereign entity.

Sovereignty — key attribute?

Ultimate authority within a territory.

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