105. See Sandel, supra note 63, at 74 ("Self-government today . . . requires a politics that plays itself out in a multiplicity of settings, from neighborhoods to nations to the world as a whole. Such a politics requires citizens who can abide the ambiguity associated with divided sovereignty, who can think and act as multiply situated selves."); see also, Sherry Turkle, Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet (1995); Sherry Turkle, The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit 95 (1984). To be sure, sophisticated analysis even of traditional legal doctrines suggests that we appear before the law only in certain partial, conditional roles. Joseph Vining, Legal Identity: The Coming of Age of Public Law 139-69 (1978). But this partial and conditional nature of "persons" who hold rights and duties is more pronounced in Cyberspace.