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16Unique ethical challenges for the 21st century: Online technology and virtue educationJournal of Moral Education 50 (3): 251-266. 2021.ABSTRACT Living well in the 21st century will present human beings with a unique set of demands and ethical challenges, many of which will require a rapid response to developments in the online space. Online activities increasingly permeate our practical lives. Although there is every indication that this activity will intensify, even experts on digital technology recognise that the precise effects of future emergent technology will be uncertain and remain unknown. We argue that education direct…Read more
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79Ethics and Self-Cultivation: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (edited book)Routledge. 2018.The aim of Ethics and Self-Cultivation is to establish and explore a new 'cultivation of the self' strand within contemporary moral philosophy. Although the revival of virtue ethics has helped reintroduce the eudaimonic tradition into mainstream philosophical debates, it has by and large been a revival of Aristotelian ethics combined with a modern preoccupation with standards for the moral rightness of actions. The essays comprising this volume offer a fresh approach to the eudaimonic tradition:…Read more
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1046Values for a Post-Pandemic FutureIn Matthew James Dennis, Georgy Ishmaev, Steven Umbrello & Jeroen van den Hoven (eds.), Values for a Post-Pandemic Future, Springer. pp. 1-19. 2022.The costs of the COVID-19 pandemic are yet to be calculated, but they include the loss of millions of lives and the destruction of countless livelihoods. What is certain is that the SARS-CoV-2 virus has changed the way we live for the foreseeable future. It has forced many to live in ways they would have previously thought impossible. As well as challenging scientists and medical professionals to address urgent value conflicts in the short term, COVID-19 has raised slower-burning value questions…Read more
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96Philosophy of Fame and Celebrity (edited book)Bloomsbury. 2025.In an era of cancel culture, digital identities and thriving conversation surrounding parasocial relationships, we question today the nature of the celebrity, the scope of their power and influence, as well as the ethical issues these implicate. It is a wonder, then, that philosophy is a discipline that has, as of yet, contributed surprisingly little to this debate despite the growing philosophical literature on connected philosophical topics that serve as a starting point for the philosophical …Read more
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74Cultivating our passionate attachments : self-cultivation in practical philosophyDissertation, University of Warwick. 2018.This thesis offers an original theory of how we can cultivate our passionate attachments based on the Francophone interpretation of the Hellenistic conception of self-cultivation. Recently Harry Frankfurt, Bernard Williams, and Susan Wolf have argued that practical philosophers must direct more attention to how our passionate attachments radically affect our resolution to the question of ‘how one should live’. By neglecting this topic, these thinkers argue, we overlook some of the strongest and …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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23Fame and flourishingIn Catherine M. Robb, Alfred Archer & Matthew Dennis (eds.), Philosophy of Fame and Celebrity, Bloomsbury. pp. 11-31. 2025.No abstract available.
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55Virtue as EmpowermentEpoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (2): 411-431. 2020.Virtue ethical interpretations of Nietzsche are increasingly viewed as a promising way to explain his moral philosophy, although current interpretations disagree on which character traits he regards as virtues. Of the first-, second-, and third-wave attempts addressing this question, only the latter can explain why Nietzsche denies that the same character traits are virtues for all individuals. Instead of positing the same set of character traits as Nietzschean virtues, third-wave theorists prop…Read more
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182Emotions and Digital Well-Being: on Social Media’s Emotional AffordancesPhilosophy and Technology 35 (2): 1-21. 2022.Social media technologies are routinely identified as a strong and pervasive threat to digital well-being. Extended screen time sessions, chronic distractions via notifications, and fragmented workflows have all been blamed on how these technologies ruthlessly undermine our ability to exercise quintessential human faculties. One reason SMTs can do this is because they powerfully affect our emotions. Nevertheless, how social media technology affects our emotional life and how these emotions relat…Read more
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234Nietzschean Self-Cultivation: Connecting His Virtues to His Ethical IdealJournal of Value Inquiry 53 (1): 55-73. 2019.Interpretations of Nietzsche as a virtue theorist have proliferated in recent years as commentators have sought to read him as a modern eudaimonistic philosopher while also attempting to show what makes his contribution to this tradition valuable and distinctive.1While some commentators still contend that interpreting Nietzsche as a eudaimonist is antithetical to his overtly-stated philosophical aims,2 over the last decade there has been a upsurge of support for such readings, especially from co…Read more
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67Technologies of self-cultivation. How to improve Stoic self-care appsHuman Affairs 30 (4): 549-558. 2020.Self-care apps are booming. Early iterations of this technology focused on tracking health and fitness routines, but recently some developers have turned their attention to the cultivation of character, basing their conceptual resources on the Hellenistic tradition (Stoic Meditations™, Stoa™, Stoic Mental Health Tracker™). Those familiar with the final writings of Michel Foucault will notice an intriguing coincidence between the development of these products and his claims that the Hellenistic t…Read more
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27Well-being, digital lives, and 'losing touch with reality'In Matthew J. Dennis & Peter Königs (eds.), The Future of Digital Well-Being, . 2025.One common cultural critique of media users who move regularly between the real and the digital (cf., Chalmers 2018) to express their agency (e.g., through planning, inquiring, desire-fulfilment, etc.), is that they risk ‘losing touch with reality’, or more weakly, that they prioritise to their detriment their digital lives over their non-digital lives. Such a critique, for instance, has been explored in connection with massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs), such as World of …Read more
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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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341Many theorists of creativity maintain that intentional agency is a necessary condition of creativity. We argue that this requirement, which we call the Intentional Agency Condition (IAC), should be rejected as a general condition of creativity, while retaining its relevance in specific contexts. We show that recent advances in generative AI have rendered the IAC increasingly problematic. We offer two reasons for abandoning it at the general level. First, we present corpus evidence indicating tha…Read more
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393Three Perspectives on Human Vulnerability: Enriching Responsible Computing Design ProcessesAcm J. Responsib. Comput (x). 2025.In response to the increasing interest in (designing for) human vulnerability within the field of responsible computing, we articulate the multi-dimensionality of the concept of vulnerability to deepen and enrich the conversations about the relationship between vulnerabilities and the design of assistive technologies. Drawing on different philosophical traditions and insights from critical disability studies, we introduce three perspectives on vulnerability–the individualist, relationalist, and …Read more
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108Examining the assumptions of AI hiring assessments and their impact on job seekers’ autonomy over self-representationAI and Society 40 (2): 919-927. 2025.In this paper, we examine the epistemological and ontological assumptions algorithmic hiring assessments make about job seekers’ attributes (e.g., competencies, skills, abilities) and the ethical implications of these assumptions. Given that both traditional psychometric hiring assessments and algorithmic assessments share a common set of underlying assumptions from the psychometric paradigm, we turn to literature that has examined the merits and limitations of these assumptions, gathering insig…Read more
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775Existing ethical guidelines that aim to guide the development of mental health apps tend to overemphasize the role of Western conceptual frameworks. While such frameworks have proved to be a useful first step in introducing ethics to a previously unregulated industry, the rapid global uptake of mental health apps requires thinking more deeply about the diverse populations these apps seek to serve. One way to do this is to introduce more intercultural ethical perspectives into app design and the …Read more
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124Living Well Together Online: Digital Wellbeing from a Confucian PerspectiveJournal of Applied Philosophy 40 (2): 263-279. 2023.The impact of social media technologies (SMTs) on digital wellbeing has become an increasingly important puzzle for ethicists of technology. In this article, we explain why individualised theories of digital wellbeing (DWB) can only solve part of this puzzle. While an individualised conception of DWB is useful for understanding online self-regulation, we contend that we must seek greater understanding of how SMTs connect us. To build an account of this, we locate the conceptual resources for our…Read more
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94Nietzsche's Untimely Prophecy: Online Exemplars and Self‐CultivationEducational Theory 73 (5): 749-761. 2023.Digital technologies are changing our understanding of ethical emulation. In this article, Matthew Dennis proposes that some social media technologies have given rise to a strikingly new set of ethical ideals, often concerned with the ideal of self-cultivation. While there is relatively little philosophical discussion of these kinds of ideals, Dennis suggests that scrutiny of Friedrich Nietzsche's ethical philosophy offers a guiding account of why the ideal of self-directed character change is i…Read more
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1187Values for a Post-Pandemic Future (edited book)Springer. 2022.This Open Access book shows how value sensitive design (VSD), responsible innovation, and comprehensive engineering can guide the rapid development of technological responses to the COVID-19 crisis. Responding to the ethical challenges of data-driven technologies and other tools requires thinking about values in the context of a pandemic as well as in a post-COVID world. Instilling values must be prioritized from the beginning, not only in the emergency response to the pandemic, but in how to pr…Read more
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97Ethics in the COVID-19 pandemic: myths, false dilemmas, and moral overloadEthics and Information Technology 23 (1): 19-34. 2021.
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149Towards a Theory of Digital Well-Being: Reimagining Online Life After LockdownScience and Engineering Ethics 27 (3): 1-19. 2021.Global lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic have offered many people first-hand experience of how their daily online activities threaten their digital well-being. This article begins by critically evaluating the current approaches to digital well-being offered by ethicists of technology, NGOs, and social media corporations. My aim is to explain why digital well-being needs to be reimagined within a new conceptual paradigm. After this, I lay the foundations for such an alternative approach, one…Read more
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71Social robots and digital well-being: how to design future artificial agentsMind and Society 21 (1): 37-50. 2022.Value-sensitive design theorists propose that a range of values that should inform how future social robots are engineered. This article explores a new value: digital well-being, and proposes that the next generation of social robots should be designed to facilitate this value in those who use or come into contact with these machines. To do this, I explore how the morphology of social robots is closely connected to digital well-being. I argue that a key decision is whether social robots are desi…Read more
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124Digital well-being under pandemic conditions: catalysing a theory of online flourishingEthics and Information Technology 23 (3): 435-445. 2021.The COVID-19 pandemic has catalysed what may soon become a permanent digital transition in the domains of work, education, medicine, and leisure. This transition has also precipitated a spike in concern regarding our digital well-being. Prominent lobbying groups, such as the Center for Humane Technology, have responded to this concern. In April 2020, the CHT has offered a set of ‘Digital Well-Being Guidelines during the COVID-19 Pandemic.’ These guidelines offer a rule-based approach to digital …Read more
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57Cultivating Our Passionate AttachmentsRoutledge. 2020.Does a flourishing life involve pursuing passionate attachments? Can we choose what these passionate attachments will be? This book offers an original theory of how we can actively cultivate our passionate attachments. The author argues that not only do we have reason to view passionate attachments as susceptible to growth, change, and improvement, but we should view these entities as amenable to self-cultivation. He uses Pierre Hadot's and Michel Foucault's accounts of Hellenistic self-cultivat…Read more
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53Correction to: the Ethics of AI in Human ResourcesEthics and Information Technology 25 (1): 1-1. 2023.
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Delft University of TechnologyPost-doctoral Fellow
University of Warwick
PhD, 2019