Technology and the Virtues

A Philosophical Guide to a Future Worth Wanting

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Shannon Vallor: Technology and the Virtues (2018, Oxford University Press, Incorporated)

328 pages

English language

Published April 3, 2018 by Oxford University Press, Incorporated.

ISBN:
978-0-19-090528-6
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4 stars (1 review)

The 21st century offers a dizzying array of new technological developments: robots smart enough to take white collar jobs, social media tools that manage our most important relationships, ordinary objects that track, record, analyze and share every detail of our daily lives, and biomedical techniques with the potential to transform and enhance human minds and bodies to an unprecedented degree. Emerging technologies are reshaping our habits, practices, institutions, cultures and environments in increasingly rapid, complex and unpredictable ways that create profound risks and opportunities for human flourishing on a global scale. How can our future be protected in such challenging and uncertain conditions? How can we possibly improve the chances that the human family will not only live, but live well, into the 21st century and beyond? This book locates a key to that future in the distant past: specifically, in the philosophical traditions of virtue ethics developed by classical …

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Review of 'Technology and the Virtues' on 'Goodreads'

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[a:Shannon Vallor|14262488|Shannon Vallor|https://s.gr-assets.com/assets/nophoto/user/u_50x66-632230dc9882b4352d753eedf9396530.png] argues that we desperately need to dedicate ourselves to cultivating and propagating a set of human virtues appropriate to our rapidly-changing technological era, so that we can preserve the hope of a future worth living.

Vallor believes that “virtue ethics” offers the best framework to work from, as other frameworks (Kantian/deontological or utilitarian/consequentialist) do not function well in situations of rapid change and what she calls “acute technosocial opacity”.

Vallor reviews the history and current revival of virtue ethics, concentrating in particular on [a:Aristotle|2192|Aristotle|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1390143800p2/2192.jpg]’s [b:Nicomachean Ethics|19068|The Nicomachean Ethics|Aristotle|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1520339295l/19068.SY75.jpg|2919427], Confucian ethics, and Buddhist ethics. She examines the methods those traditions advise us to use for moral self-cultivation. And she describes a system of moral foundations and a set of particular virtues that she thinks will serve us well in our technological age.

She then uses her proposed framework to suggest approaches to some pressing “technomoral” issues: …

Subjects

  • Technology, moral and ethical aspects
  • Virtue and virtues