Legal Persuasion in the Age of AI

Author
Abstract

This article examines algorithmic persuasion within a long-term theoretical framework that links language, persuasion, and legal rationality. Beginning with the classical relationship between speech, corporeality, and persuasion, the analysis traces the historical process through which language becomes progressively objectified, culminating in contemporary generative artificial intelligence. The paper distinguishes persuasion as a psychological effect from persuasiveness as the quality of a discourse as rational achievement emerging in oppositional argumentative contexts, a distinction central to modern legal theory. Drawing on recent empirical literature, the article shows that generative AI can reach persuasive effectiveness comparable to human agents, while identifying transparency, personalization, and cultural heuristics as key moderating factors. Finally, it highlights the ethical and juridical tensions between technological efficiency, human oversight, privacy, and the preservation of human dignity.

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Sarra C. (2026) "Legal Persuasion in the Age of AI ", Journal of Ethics and Legal Technologies, 8(1), 1-23. DOI: 10.25430/pupj-JELT-2026-1-1  
Year of Publication
2026
Journal
Journal of Ethics and Legal Technologies
Volume
8
Issue Number
1
Start Page
1
Last Page
23
Date Published
05/2026
ISSN Number
2612-4920
Serial Article Number
1
DOI
10.25430/pupj-JELT-2026-1-1
Issue
Section
Articles