-
Care robots, Virtual Virtue, and the Best Possible LifeIn Philip Brey, Adam Briggle & Edward Spence (eds.), The Good Life in a Technological Age, Routledge. pp. 281-292. 2012.
-
100From computer ethics to responsible research and innovation in ICTInformation and Management 51 (6): 810-818. 2014.The discourse concerning computer ethics qualifies as a reference discourse for ethics-related IS research. Theories, topics and approaches of computer ethics are reflected in IS. The paper argues that there is currently a broader development in the area of research governance, which is referred to as 'responsible research and innovation'. RRI applied to information and communication technology addresses some of the limitations of computer ethics and points toward a broader approach to the gover…Read more
-
16Hacking Technological Practices and the Vulnerability of the Modern HeroFoundations of Science 22 (2): 357-362. 2017.This reply to Gunkel and Zwart further reflects on, and responds to, the following main points: the Heideggerian character of my view and the potential link to Kafka, the suggestion that we should become hackers, the interpretation of my approach in terms of the Hegelian Master–Slave dialectic, the lack of an empirical dimension, and the claim that I think that modern heroism entails overcoming vulnerability. I acknowledge Heideggerian influence, reflect on what it could mean to think about livi…Read more
-
45Regulation or responsibility?Science, Technology and Human Values 31 (3): 237-260. 2006.A prima facie analysis suggests that there are essentially two, mutually exclusive, ways in which risk arising from engineering design can be managed: by imposing external constraints on engineers or by engendering their feelings of responsibility and respect their autonomy. The author discusses the advantages and disadvantages of both approaches. However, he then shows that this opposition is a false one and that there is no simple relation between regulation and autonomy. Furthermore, the auth…Read more
-
6Is gesture knowledge?In Helena De Preester (ed.), Moving Imagination, John Benjamins. pp. 113-131. 2013.
-
95Are Emotional Robots Deceptive?IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 3 (4): 388-393. 2012.A common objection to the use and development of "emotional" robots is that they are deceptive. This intuitive response assumes 1) that these robots intend to deceive, 2) that their emotions are not real, and 3) that they pretend to be a kind of entity they are not. We use these criteria to judge if an entity is deceptive in emotional communication. They can also be regarded as "ideal emotional communication" conditions that saliently operate as presuppositions in our communications with other e…Read more
-
35Technology and the good societyTechnology in Society 52 4-9. 2018.How can we best theorize technology and the good society? This essay responds to this issue by showing how our assumptions about the meaning of the social and the political influence our evaluations of the impact of new technologies on society, and how, conversely, new technologies also shape the concepts we use to evaluate them. In the course of the analysis, the essay offers a polemic that questions individualist approaches to the good society and individualist assumptions about the social, es…Read more
-
37Good healthcare is in the “how”In Simon Peter van Rysewyk & Matthijs Pontier (eds.), Machine Medical Ethics, Springer. pp. 33-47. 2014.What do we mean by good healthcare, and do machines threaten it? If good care requires expertise, then what kind of expertise is this? If good care is “human” care, does this necessarily mean “non-technological” care? If not, then what should be the precise role of machines in medicine and healthcare? This chapter argues that good care relies on expert know-how and skills that enable care givers to care-fully engage with patients. Evaluating the introduction of new technologies such as robots or…Read more
-
23Beyond “Nature”In Helen Kopnina & Eleanor Shoreman-Ouimet (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Environmental Anthropology, Routledge. pp. 105-116. 2017.
-
The phenomenology of environmental health riskIn Friedo Zölzer & Gaston Meskens (eds.), Ethics of Environmental Health, Routledge. pp. 89-102. 2017.
-
1Risk and Public ImaginationIn Sabine Roeser & Lotte Asveld (eds.), The Ethics of Technological Risk, Routledge. pp. 202-219. 2009.
-
83Ethics of healthcare roboticsRobotics And Autonomous Systems 86 152-161. 2016.How can we best identify, understand, and deal with ethical and societal issues raised by healthcare robotics? This paper argues that next to ethical analysis, classic technology assessment, and philosophical speculation we need forms of reflection, dialogue, and experiment that come, quite literally, much closer to innovation practices and contexts of use. The authors discuss a number of ways how to achieve that. Informed by their experience with “embedded” ethics in technical projects and with…Read more
-
77Wittgenstein as a Philosopher of Technology: Tool Use, Forms of Life, Technique, and a Transcendental ArgumentHuman Studies 41 (2): 165-191. 2018.The work of Ludwig Wittgenstein is seldom used by philosophers of technology, let alone in a systematic way, and in general there has been little discussion about the role of language in relation to technology. Conversely, Wittgenstein scholars have paid little attention to technology in the work of Wittgenstein. In this paper we read the Philosophical Investigations and On Certainty in order to explore the relation between language use and technology use, and take some significant steps towards…Read more
-
25Can We Choose Evil?In D. E. Keen & P. R. Keen (eds.), Considering Evil and Human Wickedness, Inter-disciplinary Press. pp. 339-354. 2004.
-
Wider den TranshumanismusNeue Zürcher Zeitung. forthcoming.Mit der Entwicklung von Gen-, Nanotechnologie und Neurotechnolgie bekommt die Menschheit mehr und mehr die Mittel in die Hand, sich in Eigenregie evolutionär weiterzuentwickeln. Das ist gefährlich.
-
2Cyborg Humanity and the Technologies of Human EnhancementIn Anthony Francis Beavers (ed.), Philosophy: Technology, Macmillan Reference. pp. 141-160. 2017.Philosophy: Technology is composed of fifteen chapters covering such topics as cyber warfare, designing children, video games and virtual reality, nanotechnology, and technology and the environment. The use of film, literature, art, case studies, and other disciplines or situations/events provide illustrations of human experiences which work as gateways to questions philosophers try to address. Chapters are written by eminent scholars, are peer reviewed, and offer bibliographies to encourage fur…Read more
-
1Risk Emotions and Risk JudgmentsIn Sabine Roeser (ed.), Emotions and Risky Technologies, Springer. pp. 213-230. 2010.
-
46Drones, Morality, and VulnerabilityIn Bart Custers (ed.), The Future of Drone Use: Opportunities and Threats from Ethical and Legal Perspectives, T.m.c. Asser Press. pp. 229-237. 2016.This chapter articulates and discusses several arguments against the lethal use of unmanned aerial vehicles, often called drones. A distinction is made between targeted killing, killing at a distance, and automated killing, which is used to map the arguments against lethal drones. After considering issues concerning thejustification of war, the argument that targeted killing makes it easier to start a war, and the argument that killing at a distance is problematic, this chapter focuses on two ar…Read more
-
Digitalisierung verändert uns: User fragen, ein Wissenschafter antwortetderStandard. At. 2016.Automatisierungstechnik, Social Media und Smartphones beeinflussen nicht nur unseren Alltag, sondern verändern auch die Art und Weise, wie wir denken.
-
106Should we ban fully autonomous weapons?Uni:View Magazin. 2018.Is it justified at all that a machine kills people, or takes decisions about life and death? Philosopher Mark Coeckelbergh argues in his guest article for uni:view why the use of fully autonomous weapons is ethically highly problematic.Weapon systems become more and more autonomous. This means that they can take decisions without human intervention. Sometimes human operators can still override the decision or are still "in the loop": they are still involved in the decision. But as the technology…Read more
-
168Narrative Technologies: A Philosophical Investigation of the Narrative Capacities of Technologies by Using Ricoeur’s Narrative TheoryHuman Studies 39 (3): 325-346. 2016.Contemporary philosophy of technology, in particular mediation theory, has largely neglected language and has paid little attention to the social-linguistic environment in which technologies are used. In order to reintroduce and strengthen these two missing aspects we turn towards Ricoeur’s narrative theory. We argue that technologies have a narrative capacity: not only do humans make sense of technologies by means of narratives but technologies themselves co-constitute narratives and our unders…Read more
-
41Alterity ex MachinaIn David J. Gunkel, Ciro Marcondes Filho & Dieter Mersch (eds.), The Changing Face of Alterity: Communication, Technology and Other Subjects, Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 181-196. 2016.
-
6Money Machines:Why We Need to Think about New and Alternative Financial Technologies?The European Financial Reivew. 2016.Technology is transforming global finance today in many ways. Designing and using alternative financial technologies may contribute to building a financially and ethically sustainable future.
-
1Digitale Zukunft: Sind wir bereits Cyborgs?derStandard. At. 2016.Die Zukunft ist eine Zukunft der Technologie. Zugleich ist sie auch eine digitale Zukunft. Was muss geschehen, damit sie ethischen und moralischen Fragen gerecht wird?
-
15Robot Enhanced Therapy for Children with AutismIEEE Technology and Society Magazine 37 (1): 30-39. 2018.The development of social robots for children with autism has been a growth field for the past 15 years. This article reviews studies in robots and autism as a neurodevelopmental disorder that impacts socialcommunication development, and the ways social robots could help children with autism develop social skills. Drawing on ethics research from the EU-funded Development of Robot-Enhanced Therapy for Children with Autism project, this paper explores how ethics evolves and developed in this Europ…Read more
-
21Imagining WorldsIn Ibo van de Poel & David E. Goldberg (eds.), Philosophy and Engineering: An Emerging Agenda, Springer. pp. 175-187. 2009.As we witness the collapse of the neoliberal consensus and the subsequent rise of authoritarian ‘strong men’ and xenophobic nationalisms across the globe, the capitalist hegemony that was consolidated by the neoliberal project remains very much intact. In pursuit of a sane alternative to this post-neoliberal world order this article proposes love as a key concept for political theory/philosophy and for performing a central role in the revolutionary transformation of contemporary global capitalis…Read more
-
21Human-Autonomous Systems Cooperation raises several ethical and philosophical issues that need to be addressed not only at the stage of implementation of the system but also preferably at the stage of development. This paper identifies and discusses some of these issues, with a specific focus on human-machine cooperation problems and chances, focusing usage of these systems in military contexts. It is argued that ethical, philosophical, and technical problems include data security and monitoring…Read more
-
21Transzendenzmaschinen: Der Transhumanismus und seine religiösen QuellenIn Benedikt Paul Göcke und Frank Meier-Hamidi (ed.), Designobjekt Mensch, Herder. pp. 81-93. 2018.