You keep using that word11/13/2023 ![]() ![]() This article therefore recommends that lawyers should set aside the flawed tool of definition and pick up the tool of analogy when they ask what words like privacy mean. ![]() Tools of definition are badly suited to determine what people mean when they say “privacy.” For example, the actual meaning of “privacy” might better be explored through the tools of linguistics or cultural anthropology than through the tool of legal definition. Like Procrustes, who strapped his victims to a bed and then either lopped off their feet if they stuck out or stretched the person on a rack if they were too short, lawyers are specifically trained to stretch and cut words. The resulting defined word may be more precise but is often crippled, isolated, and bereft of the connections and connotations that made it part of a rich and living language. Each increase in precision comes with a corresponding separation from some set of meanings that would have applied to the living, undefined version of the word. Since words in a living language mean many things (e.g., what does “cool” mean?), the act of definition reduces the multiple meanings of the defined word to a specified meaning. The exact wrong way to go about understanding privacy is by supplying one’s own definition that is unscientific. If one wishes to determine what words like these actually mean to people, definition is the wrong tool to use. The problem lies with the act of definition itself and is particularly acute when the words in question have deep-seated and longstanding common-language meanings, such as liberty, freedom, dignity, and certainly privacy. This article contends that the problem is not with the word “privacy,” but with the act of trying to pin it down. The meaning of “privacy” is notoriously hard to pin down. This article explores how the need to define privacy has impeded our ability to protect it in law. ![]()
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