Author/Authors :
Arthur Allison، نويسنده , , James Currall، نويسنده , , Michael Moss، نويسنده , , and Susan Stuart، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Digital objects or entities present us with particular problems
of an acute nature. The most acute of these are the
issues surrounding what constitutes identity within the
digital world and between digital entities. These are
problems that are important in many contexts but, when
dealing with digital texts, documents, and certification,
an understanding of them becomes vital legally, philosophically,
and historically. Legally, the central issues
are those of authorship, authenticity, and ownership;
philosophically, we must be concerned with the sorts of
logical relations that hold between objects and in determining
the ontological nature of the object; and historically,
our concern centers around our interest in
chronology and the recording of progress, adaptation,
change, and provenance. Our purpose is to emphasize
why questions of digital identity matter and how we
might address and respond to some of them. We will
begin by examining the lines along which we draw a distinction
between the digital and the physical context and
how, by importing notions of transitivity and symmetry
from the domain of mathematical logic, we might attempt
to provide at least interim resolutions of these questions