Abstract

In this paper I critically evaluate the value neutrality thesis regarding technology, and find it wanting. I then introduce the various ways in which artifacts can come to influence moral value, and our evaluation of moral situations and actions. Here, following van de Poel and Kroes, I introduce the idea of value sensitive design. Specifically, I show how by virtue of their designed properties, artifacts may come to embody values. Such accounts, however, have several shortcomings. In agreement with Michael Klenk, I raise epistemic and metaphysical issues with respect to designed properties embodying value. The concept of an affordance, borrowed from ecological psychology, provides a more philosophically fruitful grounding to the potential way(s) in which artifacts might embody values. This is due to the way in which it incorporates key insights from perception more generally, and how we go about determining possibilities for action in our environment specifically. The affordance account as it is presented by Klenk, however, is insufficient. I therefore argue that we understand affordances based on whether they are meaningful, and, secondly, that we grade them based on their force.

Highlights

  • A key question that emerges in the philosophy of technology is whether technological artifacts can embody values

  • It is a truism at this point that technology is value-laden, that is, technology can in some sense be causally efficacious in the kinds of things we come to value

  • Following Klenk (2020), I argued for an affordance-based account of value embedding

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Summary

Introduction

A key question that emerges in the philosophy of technology is whether technological artifacts can embody values. The popular retort from the NRA, captured in their slogan, is that “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people.” Implicit in this response is the neutrality thesis regarding technology: the gun itself does not carry any value and is only instrumentally valuable. Some material components of the gun, can come to embody values independently of the qualities of the user In this way an ordinary citizen, by virtue of using a gun, can become a threat to society and themselves. Gun control opponents merely claim that guns are but one efficient way of carrying out an act, with other things capable of performing the same task (Latour 1999: 176; Verbeek 2005: 155) This caricature, serves the purpose of introducing the topic of value-embedded in technology. In what follows I will briefly introduce and critique the so called “neutrality thesis” regarding technological artifacts (Illies and Meijers 2009; Peterson and Spahn 2011)

The neutrality thesis
Artifacts influencing value
Artifacts influencing moral values
Intentionally designed features as embodying value
The intentional account
Problems with the value sensitive design account
Metaphysical issues
Epistemic issues
The affordance account
Extending the affordance account
Towards a robust affordance account
The meaningfulness of an affordance
The force of an affordance
Conclusion
Findings
Compliance with ethical standards
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