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oapen-20.500.12657-611702024-03-27T14:14:25Z Chapter 2 Socially Disruptive Technologies and Moral Certainty Hermann, Julia ethics & moral philosophy; philosophy thema EDItEUR::Q Philosophy and Religion::QD Philosophy::QDT Topics in philosophy::QDTQ Ethics and moral philosophy The work of Wittgenstein has so far received little attention from scholars working in the philosophy of technology. In this chapter, I relate my Wittgenstein-inspired account of moral certainty, which conceives of moral certainty as the certainty of morally competent agents, to recent work on socially disruptive technologies and the phenomenon of technosocial disruption. In a complex interplay with other factors, technologies such as artificially intelligent systems and robots challenge norms, practices, and concepts that play a fundamental role in human life. I argue that technosocial disruption involves the disruption of moral certainty, and that we should refine our notion of moral certainty by integrating the idea of technological mediation. In our technological world, technology mediates how something acquires the role of a moral certainty or loses it, and how moral certainty is manifested in different contexts. I discuss two examples of contexts in which technological developments challenge moral agency at the level of moral certainty: the introduction of robots in elderly care practices and the potential use of ectogestative technology for foetal development. 2023-02-06T10:23:43Z 2023-02-06T10:23:43Z 2023 chapter 9781032006758 9781032015095 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/61170 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003178927_10.4324_9781003178927-2.pdf Taylor & Francis Philosophical Perspectives on Moral Certainty Routledge 10.4324/9781003178927-2 10.4324/9781003178927-2 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 83ce9230-9268-4dcf-9872-2839070a9263 20d6ac69-3dd7-44a6-9a7d-7c6dc58647f1 9781032006758 9781032015095 Routledge 17 University of Twente Universiteit Twente open access
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English
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The work of Wittgenstein has so far received little attention from scholars working in the philosophy of technology. In this chapter, I relate my Wittgenstein-inspired account of moral certainty, which
conceives of moral certainty as the certainty of morally competent agents, to recent work on socially disruptive technologies and the phenomenon of technosocial disruption. In a complex interplay
with other factors, technologies such as artificially intelligent systems and robots challenge norms, practices, and concepts that play a fundamental role in human life. I argue that technosocial
disruption involves the disruption of moral certainty, and that we should refine our notion of moral certainty by integrating the idea of technological mediation. In our technological world, technology
mediates how something acquires the role of a moral certainty or loses it, and how moral certainty is manifested in different contexts. I discuss two examples of contexts in which technological
developments challenge moral agency at the level of moral certainty: the introduction of robots in elderly care practices and the potential use of ectogestative technology for foetal development.
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9781003178927_10.4324_9781003178927-2.pdf
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9781003178927_10.4324_9781003178927-2.pdf
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9781003178927_10.4324_9781003178927-2.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2023
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1799945200757374976
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