The volume Artificial Intelligence Between Facts and Norms examines the major challenges posed by artificial intelligence through a genuinely interdisciplinary approach, grounded in a continuous dialogue between technological expertise and legal scholarship. Starting from the observation that the datafication of society and the rapid evolution of AI are reshaping the traditional categories of law, the book proposes a methodological framework based on the interaction between the fact—represented by technological innovation—and the norm, understood as the legal and regulatory response. Following two keynote essays devoted respectively to the technical and legal dimensions of AI, the volume explores six areas of significant public interest: disinformation, digital death and data immortality, facial recognition and biometrics, military applications, healthcare, and artistic creativity. In each field, contributors assess both the opportunities and the risks associated with AI technologies, evaluating the adequacy of existing legal frameworks and identifying possible paths toward an effective governance of innovation. The book demonstrates that the challenges raised by artificial intelligence simultaneously involve technological, ethical, social, and legal dimensions, making interdisciplinary dialogue an essential prerequisite for sound regulation. It ultimately offers a comprehensive reflection on how to develop a governance model capable of fostering innovation while preserving human dignity, accountability, and the enduring value of human free will in the age of artificial intelligence.
Della Morte, G. (ed.), L'intelligenza artificiale tra fatto e norma, Giuffrè Editore, Milano 2026: i-XXVI + 1-346 pp. [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/342936]
L'intelligenza artificiale tra fatto e norma
Della Morte, Gabriele
2026
Abstract
The volume Artificial Intelligence Between Facts and Norms examines the major challenges posed by artificial intelligence through a genuinely interdisciplinary approach, grounded in a continuous dialogue between technological expertise and legal scholarship. Starting from the observation that the datafication of society and the rapid evolution of AI are reshaping the traditional categories of law, the book proposes a methodological framework based on the interaction between the fact—represented by technological innovation—and the norm, understood as the legal and regulatory response. Following two keynote essays devoted respectively to the technical and legal dimensions of AI, the volume explores six areas of significant public interest: disinformation, digital death and data immortality, facial recognition and biometrics, military applications, healthcare, and artistic creativity. In each field, contributors assess both the opportunities and the risks associated with AI technologies, evaluating the adequacy of existing legal frameworks and identifying possible paths toward an effective governance of innovation. The book demonstrates that the challenges raised by artificial intelligence simultaneously involve technological, ethical, social, and legal dimensions, making interdisciplinary dialogue an essential prerequisite for sound regulation. It ultimately offers a comprehensive reflection on how to develop a governance model capable of fostering innovation while preserving human dignity, accountability, and the enduring value of human free will in the age of artificial intelligence.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



