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The Right to Privacy

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About This Book

An extended legal essay traces how common law expanded from protecting bodily integrity and tangible property to recognizing reputational, familial, and intangible interests, and argues that modern inventions and press enterprise—notably instantaneous photography and wide newspaper circulation—have created new intrusions on solitude and domestic life. It analyzes existing doctrines such as nuisance and defamation to determine whether they furnish adequate remedies, examines social harms of persistent gossip and publicity, and urges judicial development of legal protection for the individual's interest in being let alone, outlining the principles and limits such protection should observe.

About the Author

Warren, Samuel D. portrait

Samuel D. Warren

Samuel D. Warren was an American lawyer and legal scholar, best known for his influential essay "The Right to Privacy," co-authored with Louis D. Brandeis in 1890. This seminal work laid the groundwork for modern privacy law, arguing for the legal recognition of an individual's right to privacy in the face of emerging technologies and societal changes. Warren's contributions to legal thought have had a lasting impact on the fields of law and ethics, particularly in discussions surrounding personal privacy and the balance between individual rights and public interest.

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