The ethics of information:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Oxford University Press
2013
|
Ausgabe: | First edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | xix, 357 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9780199641321 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text |
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
xvii
List of most common acronyms
xx
List of figures
xxi
List of tables
xxii
Chapter
1—
Ethics after the information revolution
1
Summary
1
1.1
Introduction: the hyperhistorical predicament
3
1.2
The zettabyte era
5
1.3
ICTs as re-ontologizing technologies
6
1.4
The global infosphere, or how information is becoming our ecosystem
8
1.5
The metaphysics of the infosphere
10
1.6
The information turn as the fourth revolution
13
1.7
The evolution of inforgs
14
Conclusion
1?
Chapter
2—
What is information ethics?
19
Summary
19
2.1
Introduction: a unified model
ofinformation
ethics
20
2.2
First stage: IE as an ethics of informational resources
21
2.3
Second stage: IE as an ethics of informational products
23
2.4
Third stage: IE as an ethics of the informational environment
24
2.5
Fourth stage: IE as a macroethics
25
Conclusion
28
Chapter
3—
The method of abstraction
29
Summary
3.1
Introduction: on the very idea of levels of abstraction
30
3.2
The definition of a level of abstraction
31
3.3
Abstraction and ontological commitment
34
3.4
An application of the method of abstraction: telepresence
36
3.4.1
Presence as
epistemic
failure
37
3.4.2
Presence as successful observation
41
3.4.3
Virtual pornography
44
3.4.4
An objection against presence as successful observation
46
VI
CONTENTS
3.4.5
Informational privacy: from intrusion to abduction
49
3.4.6
The method of abstraction and telepresence
51
Conclusion
51
Chapter
4—
Information ethics as e-nvironmental ethics
53
Summary
53
4.1
Introduction: the foundationalist problem
54
4.2
Classic macroethics and ICTs ethical problems
58
4.3
An informational model of macroethics
61
4.4
From computer ethics to information ethics
63
4.5
Information ethics as a patient-oriented and ontocentric theory
65
4.5.1
Uniformity of Being
65
4.5.2
Uniformity of nothingness, non-Being, or metaphysical entropy
65
4.5.3
Uniformity of change
67
4.5.4
The ontological equality principle
68
4.6
The normative aspect
ofinformation
ethics: four ethical principles
70
4.6.1
The non-monotonic nature of goodness and its resilience
72
4.7
Information ethics as a macroethics
74
4.7.1
IE is a complete macroethics
74
4.7.2
IE and other non-standard ethics
76
4.7.3
IE and virtue ethics
77
4.7.4
IE and deontologism
77
4.7.5
IE and consequentialism
77
4.8
Case analysis: three examples
79
4.8.1
Vandalism
80
4.8.2 Bioengineering 82
4.8.3
Death
82
Conclusion
84
Chapter
5—
Information ethics and the foundationalist debate
86
Summary
86
5.1
Introduction: looking for the foundations of computer ethics
87
5.2
The 'no resolution approach':
CE as
not a real discipline
88
5.3
The professional approach:
CE as a
pedagogical methodology
90
5.4
Theoretical
CE
and the uniqueness debate
92
5.5
The radical approach:
CE as a
unique discipline
93
5.6
The conservative approach:
CE as
applied ethics
94
5.7
The innovative approach: information ethics as the foundation of
CE
97
Conclusion
99
CONTENTS
Vil
Chapter
6—
The intrinsic value of the infosphere
102
Summary
102
6.1
Introduction: an object-oriented model of moral action
103
6.2
The role
ofinformation
in ethics
109
6.3
An axiological analysis of information
112
6.3.1
A critique of Kantian axiology
114
6.3.2
A patient-oriented approach to axiology
115
6.3.3
IE's axiological ecumenism
122
6.4
Five objections
124
6.4.1
The need for an ontology
124
6.4.2
How can an informational entity have 'a good of its own'?
125
6.4.3
What happened to Evil?
128
6.4.4
Is there a communication problem?
130
6.4.5
Right but irrelevant?
132
Conclusion
133
Chapter 7^The morality of artificial agents
134
Summary
134
7.1
Introduction: standard vs. non-standard theories of agents and patients
135
7.2
What is an agent?
138
7.2.1
An effective characterization of agents
140
7.2.2
Examples
141
7.3
What is a moral agent?
146
7.4
Mindless morality
148
7.4.1
The ideological objection
148
7.4.2
The intentional objection
149
7.4.3
The freedom objection
149
7.4.4
The responsibility objection
150
7.5
The morality threshold
152
7.6
A concrete application
153
7.6.1
Codes of ethics
155
7.6.2
Censorship
156
7.7
The advantage of extending the class of moral agents
157
Conclusion
159
Chapter
8—
The constructionist values of homo poieticus
161
Summary
8.1
Introduction: reactive and proactive macroethics
162
8.2
The scope and limits of virtue ethics as a constructionist ethics
164
8.3
Why information ethics cannot be based on virtue ethics
166
8.4
Ecopoiesis
168
VIU
CONTENTS
8.5
Poiesis
in the infosphere
169
8.5.1
Interfaces
169
8.5.2
Open source
170
8.5.3
Digital arts
172
8.5.4
The construction of the self
173
8.5.5
Virtual communities
174
8.5.6
Constructionism on the web
175
8.6
Homo poieticus
175
Conclusion
177
Chapter
9—
Artificial evil
180
Summary
180
9.1
Introduction: the nature of evil
180
9.2
Nonsubstantialism: a deflatory interpretation of the existence of evil
183
9.3
The evolution of evil and the theodicean problem
185
9.4
Artificial evil
187
Conclusion
191
Chapter
10—
The tragedy of the Good Will
194
Summary
194
10.1
Introduction: modelling a Good Will
194
10.2
The tragic and the scandalous
197
10.3
The IT-heodicean problem
200
10.4
Cassandra's predicament
201
10.5
Escaping the tragic condition
204
10.5.1
The Copenhagen Consensus: using information to cope
with information
206
Conclusion
208
Chapter
11—
The informational nature of selves
210
Summary
210
11.1
Introduction: Plato and the problem of the chariot
211
11.2
Egology and its two branches
213
11.3
Egology as
synchronie
individuahzation
215
11.4
A reconciling hypothesis: the three membranes model
217
11.4.1
Phase one: the corporeal membrane and the organism
219
11.4.2
Phase two: the cognitive membrane and the intelligent animal
220
11.4.3
Phase three: the consciousness membrane and the
self-conscious mind
220
CONTENTS
IX
11.5 ICTs
as technologies
of the self
221
11.5.1
Embodiment: from dualism to polarism
221
11.5.2
Space: the detachment between location and presence
222
11.5.3
Time: the detachment between outdating and ageing
222
11.5.4
Memories and interactions: fixing the self
223
11.5.5
Perception: the digital gaze
223
11.6
The logic of realization
225
11.7
From the egology to the ecology of the self
226
Conclusion
227
Chapter
12—
The ontological interpretation of informational privacy
228
Summary
228
12.1
Introduction: the dearest of our possessions
229
12.2
Informational privacy and computer ethics
229
12.3
Informational privacy as
a fonction
of ontological friction
231
12.4
Ontological friction and the difference between old and new ICTs
232
12.5
Informational privacy in the re-ontologized infosphere
235
12.5.1
Empowering the information agent
236
12.5.2
The return of the (digital) community
236
12.5.3
Assessing theories of privacy
240
12.5.4
The ontological interpretation of informational privacy
and its value
242
12.6
Informational privacy, personal identity, and biometrics
246
12.7
Four challenges for a theory of informational privacy
249
12.7.1
Non-
Western approaches to informational privacy
249
12.7.2
Individualism and the anthropology of informational privacy
251
12.7.3
The scope and limits of informational privacy
253
12.7.4
Public, passive, and active informational privacy
256
12.8
Non-informational privacies
257
Conclusion
258
Chapter
13—
Distributed morality
261
Summary
261
13.1
Introduction: the basic idea of distributed morality
262
13.2
The old ethical scenario without distributed morality
263
13.3
The new ethical scenario with distributed morality
265
13.4
Some examples of distributed morality
267
13.4.1
The shopping Samaritan: (RED)
268
13.4.2
Plastic fidelity: the Co-operative Bank
268
13.4.3
The power of giving: JustGiving
268
13.4.4
Socially oriented capitalism: peer-to-peer lending
269
X
CONTENTS
13.5
The big challenge: harnessing the power of DM
269
13.6
Distributed morality and the enabling infraethics
272
Conclusion
274
Chapter \A
—
Information business ethics
277
Summary
277
14.1
Introduction: from information ethics to business ethics
279
14.2
The informational analysis of business
280
14.3
The WHI ethical questions: what, how, and impact
284
14.4
Normative pressure points
285
14.5
The ethical business
287
Conclusion
290
Chapter
15—
Global information ethics
292
Summary
292
15.1
Introduction: from globalization to information ethics
293
15.1.1
Contraction
293
15.1.2
Expansion
294
15.1.3
Porosity
294
15.1.4
Telepresence
295
15.1.5
Synchronization
295
15.1.6
Correlation
295
15.2
Globalizing ethics
296
15.3
Global-communication ethics vs. global-information ethics
296
15.4
Global-information ethics and the problem of the lion
297
15.5
Global information-ethics and its advantages
299
15.6
The cost of a global-information ethics: postulating the
ontic
trust
300
Conclusion
303
Chapter
16—
In defence of information ethics
306
Summary
306
16.1
Introduction: addressing the sceptic
306
16.2
IE is an ethics of news
307
16.3
IE is too reductivist
308
16.4
IE fails to indicate what information constitutes an individual
309
16.5
IE's de-anthropocentrization of the ethical discourse is mistaken
312
16.6
IE is inapplicable
313
16.7
IE is supererogatory
314
16.8
IE is hypermoralistic
316
16.9
IE's measure of intrinsic moral value is insufficiently clear and specific
317
CONTENTS
Xl
16.10
IE's inference from
moral value
to
moral respect
is
incorrect
317
16.11
IE's negative
argument
for the intrinsic
moral
goodness of
Being is incorrect
319
16.12
IE's claim to be universal is unclear and possibly contradictory
320
16.13
IE's egalitarianism is untenable
322
16.14
IE commits the naturalistic fallacy
323
16.15
IE's account of intrinsic value is incorrect
324
16.16
IE is counterintuitive
325
16.17
IE's adoption of LoA is mistaken
326
16.18
IE's interpretation of artificial agents as autonomous moral
agents is mistaken
327
16.19
IE is too conservationist
327
16.20
IE is pantheistic or panpsychistic
328
Conclusion
329
Epilogue
331
References
334
Index
353
Luciano Floridi develops an original ethical framework for dealing with the new
challenges posed by Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). ICTs
have profoundly changed many aspects of life, including the nature of entertain-
ment, work, communication, education, health care, industrial production and
business, social relations, and conflicts. They have had a radical and widespread
impact on our moral lives and on contemporary ethical debates. Privacy, ownership,
freedom of speech, responsibility, technological determinism, the digital divide,
and pornography online are only some of the pressing issues that characterize
the ethical discourse in the information society. They are the subject of Infor-
mation Ethics (IE), the new philosophical area of research that investigates the
ethical impact of IQs on human life and society.
Since the seventies, IE has been a standard topic in many curricula. In recent
years, there has been a flourishing of new university courses, international
conferences, workshops, professional organizations, specialized periodicals,
and research centres. However, investigations have so far been largely influenced
by professional and technical approaches, addressing mainly legal, social, cultural,
and technological problems. This book is the first philosophical monograph
entirely and exclusively dedicated to it.
Floridi lays down, for the first time, the conceptual foundations for IE. He does
so systematically, by pursuing three goals:
a) a metatheoretical goal: it describes what IE is, its problems, approaches,
and methods;
b) an introductory goal: it helps the reader to gain a better grasp of the
complex and multifarious nature of the various concepts and phenomena
related to computer ethics;
c) an analytic goal: it answers several key theoretical questions of great
philosophical interest, arising from the investigation of the ethical
implications of IQs.
Although entirely independent of Floridi's previous book, The Philosophy of
Information (OUP, 2011), The Ethics of Information complements it as new
work on the foundations of the philosophy of information. |
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Floridi, Luciano 1964- |
author_GND | (DE-588)143605453 |
author_facet | Floridi, Luciano 1964- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Floridi, Luciano 1964- |
author_variant | l f lf |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV041394969 |
classification_rvk | CC 7200 SR 990 AP 13625 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)830367872 (DE-599)BVBBV041394969 |
dewey-full | 174.9004 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 174 - Occupational ethics |
dewey-raw | 174.9004 |
dewey-search | 174.9004 |
dewey-sort | 3174.9004 |
dewey-tens | 170 - Ethics (Moral philosophy) |
discipline | Allgemeines Informatik Philosophie |
edition | First edition |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV041394969 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-09-23T16:14:15Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780199641321 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-026842661 |
oclc_num | 830367872 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-1052 DE-29 DE-M468 DE-525 DE-384 DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-1052 DE-29 DE-M468 DE-525 DE-384 DE-739 |
physical | xix, 357 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Floridi, Luciano 1964- Verfasser (DE-588)143605453 aut The ethics of information Luciano Floridi First edition Oxford Oxford University Press 2013 xix, 357 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Information technology / Moral and ethical aspects Ethik Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd rswk-swf Informationsethik (DE-588)4803303-0 gnd rswk-swf Kommunikationstechnik (DE-588)4031888-6 gnd rswk-swf Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 s Kommunikationstechnik (DE-588)4031888-6 s Informationsethik (DE-588)4803303-0 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-19-176093-8 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen 21 - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026842661&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026842661&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Floridi, Luciano 1964- The ethics of information Information technology / Moral and ethical aspects Ethik Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd Informationsethik (DE-588)4803303-0 gnd Kommunikationstechnik (DE-588)4031888-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4026926-7 (DE-588)4803303-0 (DE-588)4031888-6 |
title | The ethics of information |
title_auth | The ethics of information |
title_exact_search | The ethics of information |
title_full | The ethics of information Luciano Floridi |
title_fullStr | The ethics of information Luciano Floridi |
title_full_unstemmed | The ethics of information Luciano Floridi |
title_short | The ethics of information |
title_sort | the ethics of information |
topic | Information technology / Moral and ethical aspects Ethik Informationstechnik (DE-588)4026926-7 gnd Informationsethik (DE-588)4803303-0 gnd Kommunikationstechnik (DE-588)4031888-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Information technology / Moral and ethical aspects Ethik Informationstechnik Informationsethik Kommunikationstechnik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026842661&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026842661&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT floridiluciano theethicsofinformation |