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23Beyond the attention economy, towards an ecology of attending. A manifestoAI and Society 41 (1): 477-492. 2026.We endorse policymakers’ efforts to address the negative consequences of the attention economy’s technology but add that these approaches are often limited in their criticism of the systemic context of human attention. Starting from Buddhist philosophy, we advocate a broader approach: an ‘ecology of attending’ that centers on conceptualizing, designing, and using attention (1) in an embedded way and (2) focused on the alleviating of suffering. With ‘embedded’ we mean that attention is not a neut…Read more
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9Design as a School of Ethics: A Hegelian Approach to Moral Life in DesignersJournal of Philosophical Investigations 19 (53): 383-398. 2025.This article interprets design not merely as a technical activity but as a site for the realization of ethical life in Hegel’s sense. Its theoretical framework builds on Hegel’s tripartite ethical model, right (recht), morality (moralität), and ethical Life (sittlichkeit), to show how design experience, when situated in institutional roles, mediation of value tensions, and practices of mutual recognition, contributes to the actualization of freedom and responsibility in the social sphere. Method…Read more
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23Why do we Need Norm Sensitive Design? A WEIRD Critique of Value Sensitive Approaches to DesignGlobal Philosophy 33 (4). 2023.The article argues that mainstream value-sensitive approaches to design have been based on narrow understandings of personhood and social dynamics, which are biased toward Western Educated Industrialized Rich and Democratic cultures and contradicted by empirical evidence. To respond to this weakness, the article suggests that design may benefit from focusing on user behaviours from the joint perspective of values and norms, especially across cultural contexts. As such, it proposes Norm Sensitive…Read more
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131Beyond the attention economy, towards an ecology of attending. A manifestoAI and Society 41. 2026.We endorse policymakers’ efforts to address the negative consequences of the attention economy’s technology but add that these approaches are often limited in their criticism of the systemic context of human attention. Starting from Buddhist philosophy, we advocate a broader approach: an ‘ecology of attending’ that centers on conceptualizing, designing, and using attention (1) in an embedded way and (2) focused on the alleviating of suffering. With ‘embedded’ we mean that attention is not a neut…Read more
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38Value Change Sensitive Design: Elements of a Proces Ontological Framework and MethodIn Christelle Didier, Aurélien Béranger, Antoine Bouzin, Hugo Paris & Jérémie Supiot (eds.), Engineering and Value Change, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 307-325. 2025.This chapter addresses the need to monitor and respond to changes in values and the other core elements of a technology project or product during its lifespan—from its initial design phase through completion and into implementation and maintenance. The complexity we aim to address is that technology projects and products are situated in sociotechnical systems that undergo change in many of their parts over time. We are introducing the turn to Process Philosophy into Value Sensitive Design projec…Read more
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20From the Individual to the Multi-agential Development of Bildung in Engineering Education through Challenge Based LearningIn Anders Buch & Steen Hyldgaard Christensen (eds.), Bildung for Engineering Education and Practice: A New Agenda, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 51-71. 2025.In its day-to-day use, the German notion of Bildung can be translated as education. There is also a philosophical understanding of Bildung, as a concept that refers to the cultivation of human traits and capacities, as well as to the goal of this process. How can we understand Bildung as a goal of contemporary engineering education, and how does Challenge Based Learning serve as a pedagogical approach to accomplish it? To answer these questions, our contribution starts with an exploration of fiv…Read more
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25Mind the gap: bridging the divide between computer scientists and ethicists in shaping moral machinesEthics and Information Technology 27 (1). 2024.This paper examines the ongoing challenges of interdisciplinary collaboration in Machine Ethics (ME), particularly the integration of ethical decision-making capacities into AI systems. Despite increasing demands for ethical AI, ethicists often remain on the sidelines, contributing primarily to metaethical discussions without directly influencing the development of moral machines. This paper revisits concerns highlighted by Tolmeijer et al. (2020), who identified the pitfall that computer scient…Read more
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15Correction to: Energy Communities and the Tensions Between Neoliberalism and CommunitarianismScience and Engineering Ethics 28 (1). 2022.
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46From Individual Intentionality to Sympoiesis in System PhenomenologyPhilosophy and Technology 38 (1): 1-24. 2025.System thinking is widespread in technology development approaches such as “system engineering” and “system design.” We argue that postphenomenology, as a broadly accepted and essential philosophy of technology, has individual intentionality as a core foundational concept and, therefore, struggles to describe system thinking. We start by indicating that some contemporary postphenomenology scholars discuss system-related concepts such as intentional structures of human experience. We then turn to…Read more
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101Can Creativity Be a Collective Virtue? Insights for the Ethics of InnovationJournal of Business Ethics 179 (3): 907-918. 2022.Virtue accounts of innovation ethics have recognized the virtue of creativity as an admirable trait in innovators. However, such accounts have not paid sufficient attention to the way creativity functions as a collective phenomenon. We propose a collective virtue account to supplement existing virtue accounts. We base our account on Kieran’s definition of creativity as a virtue and distinguish three components in it: creative output, mastery and intrinsic motivation. We argue that all of these c…Read more
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26The Routledge international handbook of engineering ethics education (edited book)Routledge. 2025.Responding to the need for a timely and authoritative volume dedicated to this burgeoning and expansive area of research, this handbook will provide readers with a map of themes, topics, and arguments in the field of engineering ethics education (EEE). Featuring critical discussion, research collaboration, and a team of international contributors of globally recognised standing, this volume comprises six key sections which elaborate on the foundations of EEE; teaching methods; accreditation and …Read more
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92Pedagogical Orientations and Evolving Responsibilities of Technological Universities: A Literature Review of the History of Engineering EducationScience and Engineering Ethics 29 (6): 1-29. 2023.Current societal changes and challenges demand a broader role of technological universities, thus opening the question of how their role evolved over time and how to frame their current responsibility. In response to urgent calls for debating and redefining the identity of contemporary technological universities, this paper has two aims. The first aim is to identify the key characteristics and orientations marking the development of technological universities, as recorded in the history of engin…Read more
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58Mind the gap: bridging the divide between computer scientists and ethicists in shaping moral machinesEthics and Information Technology 27 (1): 1-11. 2025.This paper examines the ongoing challenges of interdisciplinary collaboration in Machine Ethics (ME), particularly the integration of ethical decision-making capacities into AI systems. Despite increasing demands for ethical AI, ethicists often remain on the sidelines, contributing primarily to metaethical discussions without directly influencing the development of moral machines. This paper revisits concerns highlighted by Tolmeijer et al. (2020), who identified the pitfall that computer scient…Read more
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47Being Taken for a Ride: Social and Technological Externalist Complements to the Internalist Reading of Buddhist Chariot SimilesPhilosophy East and West 74 (3): 379-398. 2024.Slavoj Zizek’s criticism of Western Buddhism (2014) for being a late capitalist opiate of the people is partly unwarranted and partly of undeniable relevance. His implicit assumption is that Buddhism is an internalist path that only looks into the individual inner world, leaving harmful societal systems in peace. This article offers a response to Zizek’s analysis, by interpreting the chariot simile in the Buddhist Pali Canon. Even though Pali chariot similes indeed support an internalist perspec…Read more
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1037Reimagining Digital Well-Being. Report for Designers & PolicymakersReport for Designers and Policymakers. 2024.This report aims to offer insights into cutting-edge research on digital well-being. Many of these insights come from a 2-day academic-impact event, The Future of Digital Well-Being, hosted by a team of researchers working with the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) in February 2024. Today, achieving and maintaining well-being in the face of online technologies is a multifaceted challenge that we believe requires using theoretical resources of different research disciplines. T…Read more
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67Why do we Need Norm Sensitive Design? A WEIRD Critique of Value Sensitive Approaches to DesignAxiomathes 33 (4): 1-19. 2023.The article argues that mainstream value-sensitive approaches to design have been based on narrow understandings of personhood and social dynamics, which are biased toward Western Educated Industrialized Rich and Democratic cultures and contradicted by empirical evidence. To respond to this weakness, the article suggests that design may benefit from focusing on user behaviours from the joint perspective of values and norms, especially across cultural contexts. As such, it proposes Norm Sensitive…Read more
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60Towards a Pragmatic and Pluralist Framework for Energy JusticePhilosophy and Technology 36 (3): 1-25. 2023.The three-tenet model, which focuses on ‘distributional justice’, ‘procedural justice’, and ‘justice as recognition’, has emerged as the most influential framework in the field of energy justice. Based on critical reviews of the three-tenet model, we identify three challenges that the model currently still faces: (i) a normative challenge on the grounding of the three-tenet model in philosophical theories; (ii) an ‘elite’ challenge on the justification of the use of power in energy-related decis…Read more
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162Attention as Practice: Buddhist Ethics Responses to Persuasive TechnologiesGlobal Philosophy 33 (2): 1-16. 2023.The “attention economy” refers to the tech industry’s business model that treats human attention as a commodifiable resource. The libertarian critique of this model, dominant within tech and philosophical communities, claims that the persuasive technologies of the attention economy infringe on the individual user’s autonomy and therefore the proposed solutions focus on safeguarding personal freedom through expanding individual control. While this push back is important, current societal debates …Read more
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43Correction: Community Heroes and Sleeping Members: Interdependency of the Tenets of Energy JusticeScience and Engineering Ethics 28 (6): 1-2. 2022.
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60Community Heroes and Sleeping Members: Interdependency of the Tenets of Energy JusticeScience and Engineering Ethics 28 (5): 1-17. 2022.Energy justice literature generally treats its three tenets, distributional justice, procedural justice and recognition justice, as separate and independent issues. These are seen as separate dimensions by which criteria can be formulated for a just state of affairs. And a just state of affairs regarding energy should fulfill all criteria. However, we show, using empirical research on six European energy communities that the tenets of energy justice are interdependent and negotiated in practice.…Read more
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105Energy Communities and the Tensions Between Neoliberalism and CommunitarianismScience and Engineering Ethics 28 (1): 1-21. 2022.The convergent development of distributed electricity sources, storage technologies, ‘big data’ devices, and novel ICT infrastructure matching energy supply and demand enables new local and collective forms of energy consumption and production. This socio-technical evolution has been accompanied by the development of citizen energy communities that have been supported by EU energy governance and directives, adopting a political narrative of placing the citizen central in the ongoing energy trans…Read more
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54Political Mediation in Nuclear Waste Management: a Foucauldian PerspectivePhilosophy and Technology 34 (4): 1287-1309. 2021.This paper aims to open up high-level waste management practices to a political philosophical questioning, beyond the enclosure implied by the normative ethics approaches that prevail in the literature. Building on previous insights derived from mediation theory, Foucault and science and technology studies, mediation theory’s appropriation of Foucauldian insights is shown to be in need of modification and further extension. In particular, we modify Dorrestijn’s figure of “technical determination…Read more
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88Engineering Students as Co-creators in an Ethics of Technology CourseScience and Engineering Ethics 27 (4): 1-26. 2021.Research on the effectiveness of case studies in teaching engineering ethics in higher education is underdeveloped. To add to our knowledge, we have systematically compared the outcomes of two case approaches to an undergraduate course on the ethics of technology: a detached approach using real-life cases and a challenge-based learning approach with students and stakeholders acting as co-creators. We first developed a practical typology of case-study approaches and subsequently tested an evaluat…Read more
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46LED Lighting Across Borders. Exploring the Plea for Darkness and Value-Sensitive Design with Libbrecht’s Comparative Philosophy ModelIn Gunter Bombaerts, Kirsten Jenkins, Yekeen A. Sanusi & Wang Guoyu (eds.), Energy Justice Across Borders, Springer Verlag. pp. 195-216. 2020.This chapter discusses how a comparative philosophical model can contribute to both substantive and procedural values in energy policy. We discuss the substantive values in the mainstream light-emitting diodes debate and Taylor Stone’s alternative plea for darkness. We also explore Value Sensitive Design as a procedural approach. We conclude that the comparative philosophical model of Ulrich Libbrecht can appropriately broaden the set of substantive values used in VSD. We discuss the values of ‘…Read more
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55Expanding Ethics Justice Across Borders: The Role of Global PhilosophyIn Gunter Bombaerts, Kirsten Jenkins, Yekeen A. Sanusi & Wang Guoyu (eds.), Energy Justice Across Borders, Springer Verlag. pp. 3-21. 2020.Our energy systems are truly international, and yet even now, our energy policies tend to be grounded at the national level and in many instances, remain ill-equipped to tackle transboundary energy issues. Our energy policy systems are also largely detached from the concerns of ethics or justice. It follows that we must find new and innovative ways of not conceptualising these normative issues, but of operationalising response to them. This book stems from the emergent gap: the need for comparat…Read more
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76Creating ‘Local Publics’: Responsibility and Involvement in Decision-Making on Technologies with Local ImpactsScience and Engineering Ethics 26 (4): 2215-2234. 2020.This paper makes a conceptual inquiry into the notion of ‘publics’, and forwards an understanding of this notion that allows more responsible forms of decision-making with regards to technologies that have localized impacts, such as wind parks, hydrogen stations or flood barriers. The outcome of this inquiry is that the acceptability of a decision is to be assessed by a plurality of ‘publics’, including that of a local community. Even though a plurality of ‘publics’ might create competing normat…Read more
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66Energy Justice Across Borders (edited book)Springer Verlag. 2020.This book is open access under a CC BY 4.0 license. We must find new and innovative ways of conceptualizing transboundary energy issues, of embedding concerns of ethics or justice into energy policy, and of operationalizing response to them. This book stems from the emergent gap; the need for comparative approaches to energy justice, and for those that consider ethical traditions that go beyond the classical Western approach. This edited volume unites the fields of energy justice and comparative…Read more
Ghent University
PhD, 2004
Areas of Specialization
| Value Theory |
| Philosophical Traditions |
| Applied Ethics |
| Metaphilosophy |
| General Philosophy of Science |
Areas of Interest
1 more
| Value Theory |
| Philosophical Traditions |
| Applied Ethics |
| Metaphilosophy |
| General Philosophy of Science |
| Other Academic Areas |